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The Denver Botanic Gardens School of Botanical Art and Illustration has announced its Winter/Spring 2012 schedule.

Here is what’s new at Classes Near You > Colorado:


Denver Botanic Gardens School of Botanical Art and Illustration

Denver Botanic Gardens
A complete program offering classes in pencil drawing, colored pencil, watercolor, sketching, botany, art history, scratch board, and classes dedicated to specific techniques and plant groups. See a complete course listing here. This program now works collaboratively with El Charco del Ingenio, a nature reserve and botanical garden in San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico. To learn more about the Garden’s certificate program, visit the program’s blog at http://botanicalillustration.blogspot.com. This blog is maintained by Program Coordinator, Mervi Hjelmroos-Koski.


GUEST WORKSHOPS FOR 2012

  • The Nature of Drawing Birds I with Linda M. Feltner – Feb 6-8, 2012
  • The Nature of Drawing Birds II with Linda M. Feltner – Feb. 10-12, 2012
  • Field Trip to Birds of Prey Foundation – Feb. 9
  • Egg Tempera Painting with Koo Schadler – June 8-10
  • Under the Press: Papyrus Art with Jill Powers – March 10
  • Pop-up Flowers with Shawn Sheehy – April 16-17, 2012
  • Advanced Pop-up Design – 19-21, 2012
  • Katagami: Stencil Design and Japanese Paper Patterns – April 27, 2012
  • Good Hues: Integrating Color, Design and Letters (in collaboration with Colorado Calligraphers Guild) – April 28-29, 2012
  • Papermaking: Eastern Techniques – May 5, 2012


CERTIFICATE PROGRAM at DBG

A comprehensive series of botanical illustration classes designed for dedicated illustrators and devoted amateurs. Participants must complete all required courses, elective courses and a portfolio review to satisfy requirements necessary for a certificate in botanical art.

    Required Courses
    Botanical Illustration in Pencil I
    Botany for the Botanical Illustrator
    Botanical Illustration in Pencil II
    Composition for Botanical Illustration
    Color Layering for Colored Pencil
    Botanical Illustration in Colored Pencil I
    Perfecting Perspective
    Botanical Illustration in Colored Pencil II
    Color Mixing for Artists
    Botanical Illustration in Pen and Ink I
    Botanical Illustration in Pen and Ink II
    Botanical Illustration in Watercolor I
    Botanical Illustration in Watercolor II


DISTANCE LEARNING at DBG

This new program combines in-class instruction with online instruction. Students accepted into this new certificate program must live more than 100 miles from Denver Botanic Gardens.

    Required Courses Taught at DBG
    Botanical Illustration in Pencil I
    Botany for the Botanical Illustrator
    Composition for Botanical Illustration
    Perfecting Perspective
    Color Layering for Colored Pencil

    Required Courses Taught Online with On-site Component
    (two days of in-class instruction followed by three weekly Internet sessions)
    Botanical Illustration in Pencil II
    Botanical Illustration in Colored Pencil I
    Botanical Illustration in Colored Pencil II
    Color Mixing for Artists
    Botanical Illustration in Pen and Ink I
    Botanical Illustration in Pen and Ink II
    Botanical Illustration in Watercolor I
    Botanical Illustration in Watercolor II


WORKSHOPS AT EL CHARCO 2012
– TBA

View and download all Winter/Spring 2012 schedules:

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The botanical garden at UC Berkeley has added many new classes to their schedule. Here is what’s new at Classes Near You > Northern California:


University of California Botanical Garden at Berkeley

http://botanicalgarden.berkeley.edu
This 34-acre garden was established in 1890 and is now a non-profit research garden and museum. The botanical art classes below are taught by Lee McCaffree and Catherine Watters. View a detailed schedule and register on the Garden’s website.

  • Sick Plant Clinic – First Saturday of Each Month, 9 AM – 12 PM. Free. No reservations required.
  • Monthly Butterfly Walks – Fourth Tuesday of each month (March – October); 3 – 4 PM. Garden volunteer, docent, and caterpillar lady, Sally Levinson, will lead walks through the garden in search of butterflies. Space is limited. Children welcome. Free with admission.
  • Garden Strollers – Second Wednesday of Each Month,
    11 AM – 11:45 PM. A 45-minute tour of the garden for adults with young children (3 and under). Tour will end on the lawn for play and snacks (bring your own). Children must be in a stroller or carrier during the tour. FREE with garden admission. Meet in front of the Garden Ship. For more information, call (510) 642-7082 or email garden@berkeley.edu.
  • Evergreen Wreathes and Garlands – Wednesday, December 7, 2011; 6-9 PM. Create a beautiful and festive wreath or garland to add to your holiday decorations. Greens from the Garden and other materials are included, but be sure to bring your own hand pruners. Pre-registration required. $30 non-members, $25 members.
  • Gorgeous Gifts from the Garden Holiday Soiree – Friday,
    December 9, 5-8 PM. A special after-hours event at The Garden Store featuring eco-friendly gifts and handmade items from local vendors and other garden-inspired gifts. Refreshments and special discounts too!
  • Handmade Olive Oil Soaps – Sunday, December 11, 2011; 1-3 PM. Learn how to make one-of-a-kind olive oil soaps from freshly harvested olives with Kathleen Elliot of Hillcrest Olive Ranch. Registration required. $25 non-members, $20 members.
  • From Conifers to Caryota: Member’s Walk – Thursday,
    December 15, 2011; 1:00-2:30 PM. Discover new plants and learn about the Garden’s plant collections on this insider’s tour of the Garden with Chris Carmichael, Associate Director of Collections and Horticulture. Registration required. Members only. Free.
  • Handmade for the Holidays Family Workshop – Saturday,
    December 17, 2012; 11 AM –1 PM. Create garden-inspired gifts and decorations. Materials and snacks provided. Children must be accompanied by an adult. $10 non-members, $8 members.
  • Making Local, Traditional Brine-fermented Olives – Sunday, December 18, 2011; 1-5 PM. Learn how olives are harvested, milled and brined for cooking from Kathleen Elliot, owner of the Hillcrest Olive Ranch in Sunol, CA. Registration required. $40 non-members, $35 members.
  • Makin’ Mead – Saturday, January 7, 2012; 2-4 PM. Turn honey into wine! Robert MacKimmie of City Bees will teach participants how to mix a gallon of mead to ferment at home. Yes, there will be samples and everyone goes home with recipes too. Registration is required. $50 non-members, $40 members. Space is limited. Register early.
  • Plants Illustrated Exhibition – January 14 – February 3, 2012;
    10 AM – 4 PM. The Garden is pleased to announce its third annual botanical art exhibition, Plants Illustrated. The exhibition, held in conjunction with the Northern California Society of Botanical Artists, invites viewers to explore the relationship between scientific study and fine art. The exhibit presents original artworks in watercolor, graphite, colored pencil and pen and ink and explores the many styles, forms and approaches unique to botanical art and illustration. Free with Garden admission.
  • Botanical Art for Youth & Young Adults – Saturday,
    January 14, 2012; 10 AM – 12 PM. In this workshop, young artists will be introduced to botanical art and tour the Plants Illustrated exhibition. Students will learn how to draw plants and have fun making impressive works of art to take home. An online gallery will be created to display artists’ work. Recommended for ages 8 and up. Registration required.
    $20 non-members, $15 members.
  • Botanical Art Through the Ages – Friday, January 20, 2012;
    2:00 – 3:30 PM. Botanical artist Catherine Watters will discuss the rich history of botanical art. View prints, slides and other media. Learn about Pierre-Joseph Redoute´, Maria Sibylla Merian and significant historical events such as Tulipmania and the Age of Exploration. $10 non-members; $5 members, UCB students, staff and faculty.
  • Arid House: Member’s Walk – Thursday, January 26, 2012; 1:00-2:30 PM. Join Horticulturist Bryan Gim on this special tour through the Garden’s Arid House. Explore colorful cacti, succulents and other plants from arid regions of the world in this special tour of the Arid House led by horticulturist, Bryan Gim. Space is limited. Registration required. Members only. Free.

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The Cambridge University Botanic Garden has announced its schedule of classes for 2012. The new schedule includes 14 classes about botanical art. The Garden says their botanical art classes fill up very quickly. If you plan to attend one of their classes, don’t wait too long to register.

A new class about designing illuminated letters has been added to the botanical art program. This class will be taught by Georita Harriott.


Cambridge University Botanic Garden

www.botanic.cam.ac.uk
The botanical garden at Cambridge University offers classes in botanical art and illustration. The classes are taught in a well-lit classroom designed specifically to provide botanical art students with a quiet environment in which to work.

View 2012 Botanical Art Schedule

  • Illustrating Snowdrops with Gael Sellwood – February 6-8
  • Illustrating Vegetables in Colored Pencil with Janie Pirie – February 21-23
  • Illustrating Spring Flowers with Georita Harriott – March 26-28
  • Illustrating Magnolias with Petula Stone – April 11-12
  • Intro to Botanical Illustration Using Pen and Ink with Valerie Oxley – April 25-27
  • Illustrating Blossom and Flowers with Reinhild Raistrick – May 8-9
  • NEW! Designing and Painting an Illuminated Letter with Georita Harriott
    May 14-16
  • Botanical Illustration for Beginners with Valerie Oxley – June 13-15
  • Illustrating Summer Fruits in Colored Pencil with Janie Pirie – June 26-28
  • Illustrating Sunflowers in Watercolor with Petula Stone – July 23-24
  • Illustrating Exotic Fruits & Vegetables with Ian Loe – September 4-6
  • Illustrating Autumn Color with Gael Sellwood – October 16-18
  • Illustrating Mushrooms & Toadstools with Reinhild Raistrick
    October 23-25
  • Leaf Studies with Ian Loe – November 6-8

This information can also be viewed at Classes Near You > England.

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The Greystoke Cycle Café announces is schedule of “Quirky Workshops” for the new year. The new schedule includes botanical art classes taught by Simon Williams, Kay Rees-Davies and Colin Swinton. The information below can also be viewed at Classes Near You > England.


Greystoke Cycle Café & Tea Garden

www.greystokecyclecafe.co.uk
You may remember learning about the Greystoke Cycle Café & Tea Garden during an interview with Billy Showell. This rest stop for cyclists not only provides everything a cyclist needs, it also provides a full schedule of workshops taught by artists and other professionals. The 2012 schedule includes botanical art classes and wildlife painting classes such as:

  • Botanical Illustration in Watercolor with Gouache – March 5
  • Wildlife Illustration in Watercolor with Gouache – March 6
  • Botanical Illustration in Watercolor – June 13-14
  • Painting in the Botanical Style of Charles Rennie Macintosh – July 18

View these classes and the entire 2012 course schedule here.

Also see the Greystoke Cycle Cafe’s Art Courses page.

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A steward of the environment, especially California’s Sierra Nevada, John Muir Laws, has dedicated himself to revealing the natural world through art and science.

John (Jack) Laws has been an environmental educator for 30 years. He recently collaborated with the California Native Plant Society and with English instructor, Emily Breunig, to create a wonderful curriculum integrating art, science and the language arts.

I am thrilled to introduce John Muir Laws and Opening the World Through Nature Journaling, the Feature Curriculum for December.

John has kept a sketchbook since elementary school. Challenged by dyslexia, he found that keeping a journal was the easiest way to record his experiences. Drawing and sketching helped him see things he had never noticed before. John’s mom gave John his first sketchbook. One year during a family trip, John and his family met a woman who was keeping a wildflower sketchbook. John’s mom noticed how he followed this woman and her sketchbook throughout their trip. On the next family vacation, John’s mom gave him a sketchbook and colored pencils so he could document their vacation. Little did she know that years later, John would use sketchbooks as a teaching tool.

While working as a naturalist group leader at Walker Creek Ranch in northern California, John led activities designed to connect children to nature. He decided to incorporate journaling into his activities to help students slow down and focus in the same way his own journals helped him to slow down and become a better observer. He soon began to notice differences between his journaling audience and the groups of children who ran through the ranch without stopping to see what was really there. John began to expand upon his journaling exercises. The Marin County Outdoor School at Walker Creek Ranch became a great testing ground. It took about four years for John to develop his activities. He wrote up his observations, began sharing them with other naturalists and teachers, and over a period of 10-15 years, his activities were tested hundreds of times and refined. This collection of journaling exercises eventually became Opening the World Through Nature Journaling.

The response to Opening the World Through Nature Journaling has been “amazing”, according to John. He says “(the curriculum) has been well-adopted in California and across the country. Teachers get this is authentic student-driven education.”

While John was developing and testing journaling activities, he was also launching the program Following Muir’s Footsteps and working on his book, The Laws Field Guide to the Sierra Nevada (2007).

Following Muir’s Footsteps is a conservation project for schools in the Sierra Nevada region whose aim is to encourage local youth to become citizen stewards of the Sierra. Encompassing an eighteen-county area around the Sierra Nevada, Following Muir’s Footsteps connects youth to nature through firsthand experiences and journaling. Through this program, John provides in-service training for teachers about how to use field guides and how to use science journals in their classrooms. He also sponsors one mentor teacher from each school so they can attend the Sierra Nevada Teacher Institute, a summer program where teachers learn about the biodiversity of the Sierra Nevada. School libraries also benefit from this fantastic program. The library of each participating school receives 25 copies of The Laws Field Guide to the Sierra Nevada.

The idea to create his comprehensive field guide to the Sierra Nevada was hatched when John was in high school. One day, while hiking the John Muir Trail and juggling many field guides, he thought how wonderful it would be to have all of his field guides packaged into one portable book. By the time he finished high school, John says he could visualize the pages, the layout — everything. John’s grandmother encouraged him to begin working on his dream. At about this same time, he came across a poem by Mary Oliver called The Journey. The first line of this poem read:

One day, you finally knew what you had to do, and began.

So John quit his job and says he “filled my backpack with paper and granola.” He spent the next six years documenting the flora and fauna of the Sierra Nevada. In the early stages of this full-time project, he drew whatever he encountered. At the end, he went into the field with species lists. John says the last few species on his list were a particular challenge and that locating them was a true “scavenger hunt.”

How did John take on the expansive Sierra Nevada? He started at the lower elevations in the south and, as plants bloomed in the Spring, he followed the bloom hopping back and forth between the west side and the east side. Every 1-2 weeks, John hiked out to pick up fresh supplies, get more paper, bathe and shave.

In The Laws Field Guide to the Sierra Nevada, you will find descriptions of over 1700 species and 2,700 watercolor paintings. John drew each plant from life and each illustration was started and completed in the field. Illustrations of birds, insects and mammals began as quick gesture sketches in the field. They were then finished in the studio after a careful study of museum skins, reference materials, and the collections at the California Academy of Science.

When asked how it is he can make so many big things happen, John says none of his programs were launched as big complete packages. He explains, “It was an accumulation of a lot of little pieces coming together organically. This is what makes it possible to do something big.”



Ask The Artist with John Muir Laws

John received a Bachelor of Science in Conservation and Resource Studies at UC Berkeley and a Master of Science in Wildlife Biology at the University of Montana. He is also a graduate of the scientific illustration program founded at UC Santa Cruz, that is now taught at California State University Monterey Bay. In 2011, John received the TogetherGreen fellowship from Audubon/Toyota and this enabled him to deliver the Following Muir’s Footsteps program to 10 schools in the Sierra Nevada. This month, we have the extraordinary opportunity to discuss art, science and education with John.

To take advantage of this opportunity, post your questions or comments in the comment box below. John will respond to questions throughout the month of December.

Teachers, do you know of other teachers who might like to join in the conversation? Please send them the link to this article. The conversation will happen right here on this page.


Request a copy of Opening the World Through Nature Journaling

To request your own copy of the nature journal curriculum written by John Muir Laws and Emily Breunig in collaboration with the California Native Plant Society, click here.


Drawing Plants: Tutorials by John Muir Laws

John recently posted tutorials about how to draw plants on his website. These tutorials were created specifically for teachers. The demonstrations are easy for teachers to recreate in their own classrooms. Leaf and flower templates are available for download. View John’s instructional videos in the Nature Drawing section of his website.


Get “The Laws Field Guide to the Sierra Nevada”

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A new course about advanced techniques in botanical illustration has been added to the new certificate program now offered through the Cornell University Department of Horticulture. This new course has a special introductory price of $400 for the upcoming six-week term.

Read more below and at Classes Near You > New York.


Cornell University Department of Horticulture

http://hort.cals.cornell.edu/
The Department of Horticulture at Cornell University has expanded their schedule of online courses to include an advanced techniques course in botanical illustration. The Cornell University Department of Horticulture now offers a certificate in botanical illustration through the Office of Continuing Education. This certificate program is composed of the following courses: Botanical Illustration I: Basic Drawing Techniques, Botanical Illustration II: Working with Watercolor and Botanical Illustration III: Advanced Techniques.

    Botanical Illustration I: Basic Drawing Techniques
    January 23 – March 10, 2012. Students will work in pencil and pen-and-ink. Topics include: observing nature, drawing, composition, perspective, foreshortening, and how to use light to give botanical drawings three-dimensional form. Cost: $500. Limit: 15 students.
    View syllabus and register

    Botanical Illustration II: Working with Watercolor

    January 23 – March 10, 2012. In this introductory course about color, students will continue their study of plants. Emphasis will be on simpler subjects such as a single-stem flower, fruit, and vegetables. Cost: $500. Limit: 15 students. View syllabus and register

    NEW
    Botanical Illustration III: Advanced Techniques

    January 23 – March 10, 2012. In this class, students will explore various media and develop a portfolio of work. Students will develop a proficiency in botanical drawing using pastels, colored pencil, pen and ink, pencil and chalk. Cost: $400. Limit: 15 students. View syllabus and register

After you register, you will receive enrollment guidance within 2 – 3 weeks, enabling you to get access to the site. Courses do not begin formally until January 23rd.

A Botanical Illustration Certificate of Completion from the Department of Horticulture, Cornell University, will be awarded upon the successful completion of all three botanical illustration courses.

View Cornell University’s horticulture distance learning courses

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New at Classes Near You > England:


Lewisham Arthouse, London

www.lewishamarthouse.co.uk
The Lewisham Arthouse once served as the central library of Deptford. Designed by architect Sir Alfred Brumwell Thomas (1868-1948) and funded by Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919), this former library is now features a public gallery and studio space for professional artists. Artist studios are open to the public once per year. Exhibitions in the gallery are open to the public year-round, free of charge.

    Drawing From Plant Life
    January 9 – March 19, 2012; 1:30 – 3:00 PM. Taught by artist and botanist, Alison Day, this ten-week workshop provides an opportunity to learn about the art and science of plant drawing at a theoretical and practical level. The course covers both graphic & paint techniques and theory. Students will learn about plants and examine the historical context of the discipline. This course is aimed at beginners and people who would like to update existing knowledge. To participate, please bring a sketch book and basic materials. Space is limited. Early registration is required. For more information and to register, contact instructor Alison Day.

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