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Archive for the ‘general botany’ Category

Click to download postcard (PDF)

Click to download postcard (PDF). Penstemon heterophylus, original watercolor by Joan Keesey, © 2013. All rights reserved.

The Botanical Artists Guild of Southern California invites you to view two new exhibitions of botanical art. Earlier this month, the Guild opened Botanical Visions in the Ecke Building at the San Diego Botanic Garden.

This weekend they open a second show at Chapman University in Orange, CA. This second show highlights drought tolerant plants and California’s changing environment. To create this exciting new exhibition, the Guild worked with Dr. Jennifer Funk and her ecology students in the School of Earth & Sciences. Artwork by southern California botanical artists will be on view in the Doy and Dee Henley Reading Room and on the Clarke Gallery Wall on the second floor of the Leatherby Libraries.

Meet the artists in person at the Artist Reception on Thursday, February 7, 2013 (7-9 PM). Please RSVP for the reception by February 1, 2013 by calling (714) 532-7742.

The following information has been added to the Exhibits to Visit section in the right margin on this page. Have you visited this section lately? There are wonderful events listed here. Visit this section to see if there is an event near you!


Botanical Visions

Botanical Artists Guild of Southern California
San Diego Botanic Garden
Encinitas, CA
January 12 – March 23, 2013


Drought Tolerant Beauty

Artists and Students Respond to California’s Changing Environment
Leatherby Libraries
Chapman University
Jan. 26 – Feb. 7, 2013

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Rumex obtusifolius leaf [Rumex obtusifolius Linnaeus, Polygonaceae], watercolor on paper by Julia Trickey, 2006, 55 × 36.5 cm, HI Art accession no. 7755, © 2006 Julia Trickey, All Rights Reserved.

Rumex obtusifolius leaf [Rumex obtusifolius Linnaeus, Polygonaceae], watercolor on paper by Julia Trickey, 2006, 55 × 36.5 cm, HI Art accession no. 7755, © 2006 Julia Trickey, All Rights Reserved.

What We Collect:
Recent Art Acquisitions, 2007-2012

Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh, PA
March 22 – June 30, 2013

A selection of recent acquisitions to the Art Department of the Hunt Institute, from the early 19th century through the present, will be placed in the context of the Institute’s collection practices and the history of botanical illustration. Whether working alongside botanists for scientific and horticultural publications or preparing artworks for collectors, galleries or commercial use, artists throughout the centuries have added their individual perspectives to portraying plants and have made lasting contributions to the botanical record and the history of art.

Included will be original illustrations for an early-19th-century botanical handbook and its contemporary, the field guide; a 19th-century classroom wall chart and the modern text book; a 20th-century seed packet and a booklet on seedling identification; a 20th-century monograph on the mistletoe genus and a journal article on marine fungi; drawings and watercolors illustrated by research botany professors; independent projects on floras of a region, native and medicinal plants and plants and their pollinators; and recent botanical artworks by artists previously represented in Hunt Institute’s International Exhibition of Art & Illustration. Mediums represented are watercolor on paper and vellum; ink, graphite and charcoal drawing; printmaking techniques: copper etching, wood engraving, vitreography and nature printing; and gelatin silver photography.

The artists working before 1900 include Pancrace Bessa (1772–1846), Sydenham Edwards (1769?–1819), Will Kilburn (1745–1818), James Sowerby (1757–1822), William Jackson Hooker (1785–1865), W. A. Meyn (19th-century), Powe (18th-century) and Christian Schkuhr (1741–1811). The contemporary artists featured include Bobbie Angell, Wendy Brockman, John Cody, Felicity Rose Cole, Carolyn Crawford, Paul Dobe (1880–1965), John Doughty, Beverly Duncan, Josephine Elwes Ewes, Alison Gianangeli, Janice Glimn-Lacy, Audrey Hardcastle, Lizzie Harper, Christina Hart-Davies, Lyn Hayden, Richard Homala (1934–2009), Brigette Kohlmeyer, Job Kuijt, Donelda LaBrake, Peter Loewer, Rogers McVaugh (1912–2009), Susan G. Monden, Cindy Nelson-Nold (1957–2009), Susan Ogilvy, Kandis Phillips, Alfred Putz (1892–1966), Mary Rankin, Thomas Reaume, Eugeni Sierra-Ràfols (1919–1999), Eva Stockhaus, Jessica Tcherepnine, Julia Trickey, Denise Walser Kolar, John Wilkinson and Sun Yingbao.

The Hunt’s annual Open House will be held in conjunction with this exhibition. Curators, librarians and staff will lead exhibition tours and discuss the history of botanical wall charts and botanical publications during this event. View the library’s Open House schedule.


Visitor Information

The exhibition will be on display on the 5th floor of the Hunt Library building at Carnegie Mellon University and will be open to the public free of charge.

Hours: Monday–Friday, 9 a.m.–Noon and 1–5 p.m.; Sunday, 1–4 p.m. (except March 29-31, May 5 and May 26-27). Hours subject to change, please call or email before your visit to confirm the library will be open.



About the Hunt Institute

The Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation, a research division of Carnegie Mellon University, specializes in the history of botany and all aspects of plant science and serves the international scientific community through research and documentation.

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Visit the Dutch Society of Botanical Artists Published in conjunction with the 5th anniversary of the Dutch Society of Botanical Artists. This collectors edition brings into focus bulb and tuber crops available in the Netherlands. Drawing and painting the bulbs required studious and patient documentation over several growing seasons. This book contains a selection of the collection created by the Dutch Society of Botanical Artists. Twenty-seven species of bulb and tuber crops are presented in twenty-five watercolor paintings and two graphite drawings.

Blooming Bulbs can be purchased for $20 (incl. shipping) directly from the Dutch Society of Botanical Artists. Contact Anita Walsmit Sachs for more information.

Visit the website of the Dutch Society of Botanical Artists. Here you will find information about classes, be able to view members’ artwork, browse an archive of past newsletters and browse links to interesting websites.


Citation

Dutch Society of Botanical Artists. 2012. Bloeiende bollen (Blooming Bulbs). Foreward by Gert-Pieter Nijssen. Introduction by Anita Walsmit Sachs.

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Anita Walsmit Sachs, her students and a colleague formed the Dutch Society of Botanical Artists. Why was this organization formed? Anita explains…

I became aware of the societies in England and America and was really shocked that in a country like mine, the Netherlands with its long history of flower painting and where there are so many breeders and flowers and where plants cost almost nothing, there was not such a society…

Learn more about the Society’s publications and their exhibition in a castle!

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Attention Chicago-area artists, naturalists and educators! Discover a new opportunity for you to learn about botanical art in a casual and supportive environment.

Members of Chicago Botanical Artists would like to extend to you this personal invitation to join their monthly gatherings:

    Chicago Botanical Artists is a new group open to all, beginners through advanced, who want to sketch together, share works in progress and develop a supportive community that exhibits and educates. Starting on February 11, we will meet from 1 to 3 pm on the second Monday of every month at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum, 2430 N. Cannon Drive, Chicago. We will sketch native plants in and around the Nature Museum’s gardens, working outdoors when weather permits, or indoors with specimens. There is no cost.

    To register: Email adultprograms@naturemuseum.org or call 773-755-5100, Ext. 5028.

This information has also been posted to Classes Near You > Illinois.

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When drawing in pen and ink, what gets inked first?

Anita describes how she inks a botanical plate:

After tracing the habit of the plant and drawing all the details asked for by the scientist, I gather all the items and arrange them in my format of 24 cm x 36 cm, taking much care with the composition. Because I do not work with a computer and everything is done by hand, I try to avoid overlaps. This is because later on, after the drawing has been scanned, some elements of the drawing may be re-used in another format…

Learn More

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Add some color to your winter. Take a botanical illustration course in the Greenhouse Classroom at Cylburn Arboretum!


Cylburn Arboretum

http://cylburnassociation.org
Located in Baltimore, Cylburn Arboretum is the home of a post-Civil War estate built as a summer home for the President of Baltimore Chrome Works and his mother. Now a center for environmental education and horticulture, the Cylburn Arboretum hosts tours, events and activities for children and adults.

The botanical art classes at Cylburn are taught by botanical artist, Molly O. Hoopes. Learn more about Molly in the ASBA Members’ Gallery. Molly is a member of the Botanical Art Society of the Northern Capitol Region and serves as Exhibits Co-Chair for this group.

    Winter Botanical Illustration 2013
    Thursdays, January 17, 24, 31 and February 7
    February 14 (makeup day)
    Greenhouse Classroom
    5:30-8:30 PM

    Learn how to draw plants with scientific accuracy using the artistic techniques needed to create beautiful and lasting plant portraits. Beginners will acquire new knowledge and skills, and experienced artists will refine techniques and find fresh directions for their work. Class size is kept small so students will enjoy learning in a positive and encouraging atmosphere. Molly Hoopes studied botanical illustration at Gage Academy and at Brookside Gardens School of Botanical Art and Illustration. She is a member of the American Society of Botanical Artists. Cost: Members $225; Non-members $250. Fee due at time of registration. Twelve hours of instruction. Call (410) 367-2217 x 104 to register.

This information has also been posted at Classes Near You > Maryland.

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