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Archive for the ‘Learning Opportunities’ Category

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Back from the Brink: Celebrating Species Making a Comeback

A group art show by MasterWorks for Nature opens at the Lloyd Library in Cincinnati, OH on June 7, 2014. You are invited to attend the opening reception that will be held from 4-7 PM. Arrive early to attend a special presentation by Dr. Terri Roth who will talk about species conservation and the Carl H. Lindner Jr. Center for Conservation and Research of Endangered Wildlife at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden.

The art, as well as the rare books on display, celebrate iconic species that were once on the brink of extinction, but through positive human intervention, managed to stage a comeback. Featured species include the Bald Eagle, Bison, wolf, trumpeter swan, and grizzly bear, among others.

The concurrent book exhibition features rare natural history titles held by the Lloyd, some of which offer the earliest printed depictions of the featured species. The books center on the work of the “father of natural history,” a Frenchman, George‐Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, who in the 18th century wrote one of the most comprehensive and scientifically based natural history encyclopedias. His work formed the basis of natural history research and development for the next 100+ years.

Proceeds from sales of the artwork will benefit the Lloyd Library and the Carl H. Lindner Jr., Center for Conservation and Research of Endangered Wildlife.


Visit the Lloyd Library

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Click to go to conference website.

Click to go to conference website.

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flyer_LAIFS_2014 Learn About Ferns This Summer

The 50th Annual Fern and Exotic Plant Show & Sale will be held in July this year.

Admire award-winning plants, learn about ferns and take some home too. Attend lectures and demonstrations and shop for ferns, exotic plants and other garden-related merchandise in the very popular marketplace. Opportunity drawings are held throughout the day on both days. Enter your name for a chance to win plants and related supplies.

This annual show and sale is hosted by the
Los Angeles International Fern Society and will be located in and around Ayres Hall at the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden. Click on the image to download the flyer. Share this post with fellow gardeners and fern enthusiasts.

ArtPlantae will be in the marketplace again this year. Hands-on activities, botanical art coloring book for kids and more. See you there!


Visit the Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden

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Did you know there was once a movement to create a large botanical garden in metropolitan Los Angeles?

The Kew Royal Botanic Gardens uncovered records and letters about this garden in their archives and writes about the garden on their website. They tell the story of California naturalists who started a non-profit organization and who purchased 3,200 acres of land in the Santa Monica Mountains. The organization planned to use 800 acres to create a public garden and research center. The remaining 2,400 acres were to be sold as residential property. The proceeds were to fund the garden.

Called the “California Botanic Garden”, the garden opened in 1928. The stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression forced the garden closed in 1935. The garden and the surrounding land was sold and both were eventually enveloped into what is now L.A.’s Brentwood community.

What happened to all the plants?
Find out in The Forgotten Garden on Kew’s website.



You Might Also Enjoy This from the Teaching & Learning Archves

Public Perception of Botanical Gardens



Reminder: The weekly teaching & learning column is on a brief publishing break. This break will continue through June.
In the meantime, I hope you enjoy revisiting selected articles.

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Now Available, $29.99

Now Available, $29.99

The American Society of Botanical Artists has released the catalog for the traveling exhibition Following in the Bartrams’ Footsteps: Contemporary Botanical Artists Explore the Bartrams’ Legacy.

Father and son, John and William Bartram, were two of the first American naturalists. They are credited with introducing the flora of North America to the field of horticulture. Learn about the history of these early explorers and their contributions to horticulture and science in this new catalog.

This 124-page catalog features 46 drawings, etchings and paintings by forty contemporary botanical artists. It also contains the following:

    Preface by Sir Peter Crane
    School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University


    John and William Bartram – American Natural History Artists

    Joel Fry, Curator, Bartram’s Garden, Philadelphia


    John and William Bartram’s Explorations

    Brad Sanders


    Following in the Bartrams’ Footsteps

    Patricia Jonas


Artists & Artwork
:

William Alberti – Scarlet Hibiscus
Bobbi Angell – Shooting Star
Karen Coleman – Bartram’s Acorns
Wendy Cortesi – Sassafras and Spicebush Swallowtail
Susan Curnutte – Switchgrass
Estelle DeRidder – Fuller’s Teasel
Carrie DiCostanzo – Cockscomb
Beverly Duncan – Bartram’s Seedlings #2; Bartram’s Seeds
Margaret Farr – Love-in-a-Mist
Ingrid Finnan – Eastern Redbud
Maria Cecilia Freeman – Cherokee Rose
Lara Call Gastinger – Collected Mosses
Joan Lavigueur Geyer – Lyre-leaved Sage
Carole Gorin – Spanish Moss on Laurel Oak Branch
Carol E. Hamilton – Yellow Pond Lily
Gillian Harris – Toadshades
Wendy Hollender – Echinacea
Rose Marie James – Morning Glory
Heeyoung Kim – Green Dragon in Fall
Ku-mie Kim – Indian Woodoats
Barbara Klaas – Smooth Sumac
Karen Kluglein – Bartram’s Franklinia
Jee-Yeon Koo – Spotted Beebalm
Kay Kopper – Pitch Pine
Dianne McElwain – American Lotus
Rhonda Nass – Foxglove
Derek Norman – The Complete Life Cycle of the Wild Leek; Large-flowered Bellwort
Sharron O’Neil – American Mountain Ash
George Olson – Prairie Dock
Dick Rauh – 12 Pine Cones; Franklinia Capsules
Betsy Rogers-Knox – Forest FLoor; Wild Cucumber
Maryann Roper – Beautyberry
Lizzie Sanders – Spiderwort
Judith Simon – Indian Pink
Judy Thomas – Paw Paw
Louisa Rawle Tiné – Silky Dogwood
Melissa Toberer – Rose Mallow
Jeannetta vanRaalte – Turk’s Cap Lily
Catherine Watters – American Persimmon
Carol Woodin – Greater Purple-fringed Orchid


Purchase Catalog

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Naturalist and artist, Mark Catesby, created the first illustrated record of the plants and animals of North America. His field notes and observations are recorded in The Natural History of Carolina, Florida & the Bahama Islands. Only fifty facsimile copies exist. To mark the 300th anniversary of Catesby’s arrival to the New World, 20 sets of his landmark text have been published and bound by Addison Publications, the publisher who also published Prince Charles’
Highgrove Florilegium.

Learn more about the special limited edition of The Natural History of Carolina, Florida & the Bahama Islands.

Will you be visiting Richmond, VA this month?

Fifteen images from the first facsimile edition of Catesby’s Birds, Beasts, Fishes, Serpents, Insects & Plants (1712-1726) are now on view in the library at
Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden in Richmond, VA. Normally stored in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle, these remarkable works about the natural history of North America will be on view through June 1, 2014.


Birds, Beasts, Fishes, Serpents, Insects & Plants (1712-1726)

Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden
April 24 – June 1, 2014
Hours & Directions

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By Philadelphia Society of Botanical Illustrators

©2014 Pat Field, Lilium tigrinum (Tiger Lily). AllRightsReserved

© Pat Field, Lilium tigrinum (Tiger Lily). All rights reserved

The exhibition of botanical art at
The Highlands in Fort Washington, PA celebrates the many plants and flowers found in its historic Sinkler Garden. The two-acre formal garden was first created in 1840 and expanded in the 1920s by Caroline Sinkler. The list of specimens in the Garden covers nearly 20 densely packed pages. From this extensive list, the Philadelphia Society of Botanical Illustrators (PSBI) selected 35 specimens to honor in their paintings. Paintings were created on paper, vellum and mylar using watercolor, acrylic and colored pencil.

Featured in the exhibition is the tiger lily (Lilium tigrinum) by Pat Field, shown above. This is only one of the 13 lilies grown in the 1920 Sinkler Garden. Pat Field also painted a red iris (Iris germanica, one of 28 varieties in the Garden). Other featured paintings include the parrot tulip (Tulipa sp.) by Linda Kneeland; the red hot poker
(Kniphofia uvaria) by Joan Frain; and Glory of the Snow (Chionodoxa siehei) by Carol Ashton-Hergenhan.

The gardens and grounds of The Highlands are open to the public from dawn to dusk throughout the year. Admission is free. The PSBI exhibition will be on view inside the historic mansion May 22-29, 2014.

Hours: 11 AM – 3 PM weekdays; 1-4 PM weekends and Memorial Day

Admission: $5 for adults, $4 for seniors, and $3 for children

Visit The Highlands

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