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Archive for the ‘History’ Category

Rachel McMasters Miller Hunt (1882-1963) was passionate about plants, gardens, botany, books, the book arts and botanical art. In 1961, her personal collection of books, prints, drawings, watercolors, portraits, letters and manuscripts were donated to the Rachel McMasters Miller Hunt Botanical Library. This library would eventually become the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

The book, Botany and History Entwined: Rachel Hunt’s Legacy is the exhibition catalog of the Institute’s current exhibition featuring items from Rachel Hunt’s original collection. The exhibition documents Rachel Hunt’s interests in books, the book arts and botany.

Authors Charlotte A. Tancin, Lugene B. Bruno, Angela L. Todd and Donald W. Brown tell the story of how a young Rachel McMasters Miller grew up to become a collector of herbals, botany books, botanical manuscripts and botanical art, and how her collecting was motivated by her interest in the role illustration played in communicating information about plants.

Through Hunt’s amazing collection, one can trace the history of botany and observe changes in how plant scholars made meaning. When explorers began to travel the world, they collected plants wherever they went and brought specimens back to Europe. This challenged scholars to reevaluate what they thought they knew about plants. Classification became a huge issue. Tancin et al. (2011) describe how scholars documented their new way of thinking in books and how the invention of the printing press and the increased availability of books led to increased networking among scholars. They also explain how the quality of book illustrations changed over time, changes that can be observed first-hand by anyone reading this wonderfully detailed exhibition catalog.

Included in the catalog is an image of the earliest printed book in Hunt’s original collection, Macer Floridus De Viribus Herbarum (1477), a medieval Latin poem about herbs. This image is joined by several images of herbals, floras and other books about plants. There is even a photograph of Rachel Hunt’s passport. This is a significant entry because Hunt did not only collect books, she retraced the footsteps of botanists and explorers and traveled to locations significant to botany’s history.

The significance of each botanical event documented in this book is made richer by the authors who provide interesting historical facts with each image. This catalog is highly recommend for anyone with an interest in botany, its history and how illustrations have been used to convey information about plants.

Botany and History Entwined: Rachel Hunt’s Legacy is available for purchase from the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation ($22). Visit the Hunt’s Publication page to download an order form.


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Save 25% until October 7, 2011

Roses
Pierre-Joseph Redouté
James Sowerby
$22.99

The paintings and drawings of botanical artist Pierre-Joseph Redouté (1759-1840) and naturalist/illustrator, James Sowerby (1757-1822), fill the pages of Roses, a collection of botanical art packaged neatly in a softcover book. One hundred fifty-nine of Redouté’s rose paintings and eighty-eight of Sowerby’s paintings/line drawings of plants in the Rosaceae (Rose Family) are featured. The plates are shown exactly as they were created. Descriptions of each rose can be found in the book’s index.

A DVD containing images from the book is included. Image files are in .jpg and .png format and can be viewed directly from the disc and in programs such as Adobe FreeHand, Photoshop, and Illustrator.

This new title is available at ArtPlantae Books for $17.24, 25% off the list price of $22.99. This special offer expires Friday, October 7, 2011.

Go to ArtPlantae Books to read more about this title.

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There is plenty to learn at UC Berkeley’s botanical garden this Fall. Learn how to draw, how to paint and how to compose a botanical drawing in classes taught by Catherine Watters and Lee McCaffree. Learn a bit about Latin, immerse yourself in economic botany and even learn how to make a bike out of bamboo.

The following has been added to Classes Near You > 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.
  • Botanical Latin: It’s a dead language but it’s still aliiiiive – Tuesday, September 13, 2011; 10:30 AM – 2:00 PM. Back by popular demand! During this brief introduction to Latin, you will learn the names for plants and the way the names are constructed. You’ll also learn Latin and Greek word roots for plant names and botanical terms, and use some simple rules of thumb to pronounce plant names with confidence. Al Luongo originally developed this course for the New York Botanical Garden. Refreshments and a full copy of course notes included. Pre-registration required; $30, $25 members.
  • Botanical Art: Painting Apples, Pears, Quince – Friday, September 16, 2011; 10 AM – 4 PM. These beautiful fruits are wonderful botanical art subjects! Celebrated botanical artist Catherine Watters will teach you how to compose your painting and capture their elegant shapes and rich colors. Students will be instructed on the use of shadows, highlights and the mixing of colors. All levels are welcome and students may use graphite, colored pencils or watercolor. Pre-registration required; $80, $75 members.
  • Native Bees with Dr. Gordon Frankie – Sunday, October 2, 2011;
    11 AM – 1 PM. Dr. Frankie is a UC Berkeley professor, research entomologist and a native bee expert. His specialty is the behavioral ecology of solitary bees in wild lands and urban environments of California and Costa Rica. Dr. Frankie will discuss some of the more common species of native bees, as well as, the plants and gardening practices, that will encourage them to take up residence in your garden. He will talk about current projects and share stories from the field. Pre-registration required; $25, $20 members.
  • Foods of the Americas Exhibit Docent-led Tours – October 6 – 20, 2011, 9:30 AM & 11:30 AM. Pre-pre-registration required by September 15. Feast your eyes on the vibrant textures and colors of the fall harvest in our Foods of the Americas exhibit. Visit our marketplace filled with produce from ancient Indian cultures, from the well-known corn, tomatoes, potatoes, and chocolate to the less familiar amaranth, quinoa and oca. See them growing in our Crops of the World Garden, Tropical House, and the Mexico/ Central American and South American collections. Free with Garden admission. Schools may schedule a special 75 minute program for their classes.
  • Bamboo Workshop with Stalk Bicycles – Saturday, October 8, 2011;
    11:00 AM – 1:30 PM. Stalk Bicycles of Oakland will be on-site to show you how they hand-craft custom bicycle frames from bamboo and other sustainable materials. They will demonstrate how bamboo is a sustainable, versatile and sculptural material – perfect for bike construction and many other design projects. Join us as we learn about bamboo, sustainable manufacturing, bamboo construction, and see their one-of-a-kind, custom artisanal bikes. $15, $10 members; registration required.
  • Film Screening: Queen of the Sun – Wednesday, October 12, 2011;
    6:00 – 8:00 PM. Queen Of The Sun: What Are The Bees Telling Us? is a profound, alternative look at the global bee crisis from Taggart Siegel, director of The Real Dirt On Farmer John. Taking us on a journey through the catastrophic disappearance of bees and the mysterious world of the beehive, this engaging and ultimately uplifting film weaves an unusual and dramatic story of the heartfelt struggles of beekeepers, scientists and philosophers from around the world including Michael Pollan, Gunther Hauk and Vandana Shiva. Together they reveal both the problems and the solutions in renewing a culture in balance with nature. Pre-registration required; $12, $10 members.
  • Foods of the Americas Family Day! – Sunday, October 16, 2011;
    10:00 AM & 1:00 PM. Spanish and English Docent Led Tours of the Exhibit; 2 PM Native Food Tastings & Crafts. Free with Garden Admission.
  • Fall Bird Walk – Saturday, October 29, 2011; 9:00 – 10:30 AM. Observe resident, migrant and vagrant birds in the Garden’s many bird-friendly microhabitats with birding expert Phila Rogers and Associate Director of Collections & Horticulture Chris Carmichael. Pre-registration required; $20, $17 members.
  • Botanical Art: Autumn Leaves with Lee McCaffree – Sunday, November 13, 2011; 10 AM – 4 PM. Fall foliage offers a brilliant color palette to catch our eye, but a graphite drawing or green leaf can be just as fascinating. Expert Lee McCaffree will instruct students on the structure of leaves as students to draw and paint them. The class will consider many types of leaves from the Garden before drawing them and closely examine structure and detail. Students may use pencils or watercolor to create an original work using the colors and/or patterns of fall leaves. All levels are welcome. Pre-registration required; $80, $75 members
  • California Natives: Plants and People Tour for Kids – Saturday, November 19, 2011; 1:00 – 2:30 PM. How could people get everything they need from the natural environment without stores? Learn about the plants used by California Indians for food, shelter, clothing, tools, medicine, games, and music. Explore the varied customs and skills of California’s earliest inhabitants. Create your very own take-home project inspired by early Californian crafts. Pre-registration recommended; $15 for each adult and child, $12 members; $5 each additional person.

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Stephen Joseph, Herbarium Print. California Polypod, Polypodium californicum. Polypodiaceae. Hab. Sierra Nevada, California. Collected by John Muir. 1875

The Oakland Museum of California (OMCA) presents A Walk in the Wild: Continuing John Muir’s Journey, on view August 6, 2011, through January 22, 2012, in the Museum’s Great Hall. In this provocative new exhibition, OMCA celebrates the legendary naturalist’s life, work, and legacy in California and beyond. Told through OMCA’s collections of art, history, and natural science, as well as interactive digital technology and extensive loans―Muir’s journals, manuscripts, original drawings and plant collections―the exhibition pays tribute to the “Father of the National Parks,” whose legacy continues to inspire environmental stewardship in California today.

Through interactive, multisensory displays, A Walk in the Wild invites visitors to explore the vast natural environment of California and experience the sights, sounds, and smells that Muir encountered during his explorations. Through video and interactive technology, visitors will be able to meet “Modern Day Muirs” and learn about their work and motivations. The featured Modern Day Muirs include: Shelton Johnson, Yosemite National Park ranger; John Wehausen, wildlife biologist; Dune Lankard, Alaskan environmental activist/fisherman; Rick Deutsch, Half Dome hiker/author; Jean Krejca, cave explorer; Greg Stock, Yosemite National Park geologist; Steve Sillett, redwood canopy researcher; Tori Seher, Yosemite National Park bear biologist and Alcatraz bird biologist; and Kemba Shakur, tree planter for Oakland Relief.

“This exhibition is filled with wonder and discovery,” says guest curator Dorris Welch. “We all have many things to learn from John Muir’s legacy. To be able to honor and bring John Muir’s legacy into a modern-day light is an extremely important thing,” Welch says of the OMCA-exclusive show.

A Walk in the Wild: Continuing John Muir’s Journey is made possible by generous support from the Oakland Museum Women’s Board, The Bernard Osher Foundation, the J.M. Long Foundation and the University of the Pacific Library, John Muir Papers, Holt Atherton Collections/Muir-Hanna Trust.

The museum is located one block from the Lake Merritt BART station on the corner of 10th Street and Oak Street. The accessibility ramp is located at the new 1000 Oak Street main entrance. Daily hours and admission information are available online at the OMCA website.

Journal. Yosemite Journal, 1872. John Muir Papers, Holt-Anderson Special Collections, University of the Pacific Library. ©1984, Muir-Hanna Trust.

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Jeanne Baret was born in 1740 to very poor parents living in an agricultural community in France. Earning money only when their labor was needed, Baret’s parents often did not have food for their small family. Young Jeanne was destined for a life of poverty and near starvation. However one day, she crossed paths with botanist Philibert Commerson.

Commerson was a young, over-confident botanist who became interested in the medicinal value of plants after he was bit by a rapid dog and monks nursed him back to health with their herbal remedies. When Baret and Commerson crossed paths that fateful day in the field, Jeanne was in her 20s and was a knowledgeable herb woman. She answered Commerson’s questions about medicinal plants and taught him what he wanted to know. Over time, a relationship developed and this relationship set the stage for an adventure neither could have ever imagined.

In 1765, Commerson was chosen to travel with Commander Louis-Antoine de Bougainville on an expedition that was to last three years. Jeanne joined the expedition not as Jeanne, but as “Jean”, Commerson’s young male assistant. Baret went to great lengths to hide her identity and to pull her share of the workload on the Etoile, a storeship measuring 102 feet long and 33 feet wide occupied by 116 men. She collected plants, animals, and documented specimens the way a field assistant should, in spite of growing curiosity about young Jean’s less than male-like male features.

Author Glynis Ridley tells the story of Commerson, Baret, and the famous philosophers and naturalists of the Enlightenment Period in a well-researched and captivating saga based on the handwritten journals of people who traveled with the expedition and on the published accounts of 18th-century naval officers. Ridley transports readers back to the 1700’s and through engaging storytelling, provides readers with insight into the harsh living conditions of the 18th-century and the unfortunate laws defining women and their roles in society. Through her well-documented tale about Bougainville’s expedition, Ridley is able to recreate the tension generated by the spice trade and competing European countries as they raced to establish colonies across the globe.

The Discovery of Jeanne Baret is a lesson in world history, geography, oceanography, anthropology, and botany that is not to be missed.


Author Event with Glynis Ridley

We owe much of our understanding about biodiversity to early explorers. Learn more about botanist and herb woman, Jeanne Baret, in a live conversation with author Glynis Ridley on Saturday April 16, 2011. This live one-hour event will occur in the Discussion forum on ArtPlantae’s Facebook page at 11 am PST / 2 pm EST. You’re all invited!

UPDATE (4/21/11): Read interview with Glynis Ridley

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The year was 1765. Eminent botanist Philibert Commerson had just been appointed to a grand new expedition: the first French circumnavigation of the world. As the ships’ official naturalist, Commerson would seek out resources—medicines, spices, timber, food—that could give the French an edge in the ever-accelerating race for empire.
 
Jeanne Baret, Commerson’s young mistress and collaborator, was desperate not to be left behind. She disguised herself as a teenage boy and signed on as his assistant. The journey made the twenty-six-year-old, known to her shipmates as “Jean” rather than “Jeanne,” the first woman to ever sail around the globe. Yet so little is known about this extraordinary woman, whose accomplishments were considered to be subversive, even impossible for someone of her sex and class.
           
When the ships made landfall and the secret lovers disembarked to explore, Baret carried heavy wooden field presses and bulky optical instruments over beaches and hills, impressing observers on the ships’ decks with her obvious strength and stamina. Less obvious were the strips of linen wound tight around her upper body and the months she had spent perfecting her masculine disguise in the streets and marketplaces of Paris.
           
Expedition commander Louis-Antoine de Bougainville recorded in his journal that curious Tahitian natives exposed Baret as a woman, eighteen months into the voyage. But the true story, it turns out, is more complicated.



Who was herb woman, Jeanne Baret?

Find out during EE Week! You are invited to participate in a conversation with author Glynis Ridley during EE Week (April 10-16, 2011).

Immerse yourself into the life story of Jeanne Baret and get ready to ask questions. Order a copy of The Discovery of Jeanne Baret from ArtPlantae Books and save 20% off the list price for this special event.
Offer ends April 17, 2011.


EVENT DETAILS
:

    When: Saturday April 16, 2011 at 11 am-12 pm (PST) / (2-3 pm EST)
    Where: Discussion Forum on the ArtPlantae Facebook page.

UPDATE (4/21/11): Read interview with Glynis Ridley


Synopsis courtesy of Random House, Inc.

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The Denver Botanic Garden’s Botanical Art & Illustration Program is leading an Arts & Archives Tour to London and Madrid, March 31 – April 11, 2011. There is room for two more adventurous travelers. Two critical travelers, in fact. If you are interested in this tour, please email the Program Coordinator or call 720-865-3653 as soon as possible.

Here is a quick look at the itinerary. A more detailed itinerary can be viewed here.


LONDON: Accommodation at Royal Gardens Hotel

April 1:

  • Arrive in London

April 2:

  • Hampton Court Palace: Botanical Archives including the Florilegium 
  • Royal School of Needlework and the floral treasures (2-hour tour)

April 3:

  • Visit Ann Swan and her studio in Wiltshire
  • Visit Avebury Henge, Avebury

April 4:

  • Kew Gardens
  • Viewing of Beatrix Potter Collection at the Blythe House
  • Westminster Abbey organ concert 17:45 p.m (free 30 min. organ recital).

April 5:

  • Natural History Museum and  its library collections

April 6:

  • Victoria and Albert Museum
  • Viewing of SBA (Society of Botanical Artists) 2011 Exhibit at Westminster Central Hall (press preview)
  • Flight to Madrid


MADRID: Accommodation at Hotel Agumar

April 7:

  • Royal Botanic Gardens and their archives and collections
  • Parque del Retiro
  • National Archaeological Museum

April 8:

  • Visit and tour of the Royal Tapestry Factory
  • Prado Museum
  • Mercado de San Miguel

April 9:

  • Museo de America
  • Centro de Arte Reina Sofia

April 10:

  • El Rastro, Europe’s biggest flea market next to Europe’s biggest stamp and coin market, both open on Sundays only.
  • Palacio Real
  • Plaza Mayor
  • Flamenco (e.g., Las Tablas) or Bullfight

April 11:

  • Last minute shopping or sight-seeing on your own
  • Those extending their trip start their explorations (e.g., Toledo, Spain’s former capital and the home town for El Greco and with a magnificent cathedral)
  • Flight home

Tour is limited to 13 participants.

Price without the airfare is $2,775US (includes hotel accommodation with breakfast daily, London Travel pass, Madrid Travel pass, private day excursion to Wiltshire, group travel insurance, and entry tickets where applicable). For more information, please call 720-865-3653 or email Program Coordinator.

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