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Archive for the ‘Special Announcements’ Category

Drawing is not about making pictures, but it is about learning to see through drawing.

— Ila Crawford

In Art Instruction in Botany Lab, Lyn Baldwin and Ila Crawford investigated how drawing changed the way botany students learned in a traditional botany lab. This year, they are investigating the reverse — how students in a traditional art class will react to the study of botany.

In a recent article, Does the Science of Botany Need Art? Does Art Need the Science of Botany?, Baldwin and Crawford write about how the disciplines of art and botany can benefit from each other. To make their points, Baldwin (a quantitative field botanist) explains why “the science of botany needs the joy of art” and Crawford (a visual art instructor with 20 years experience) explains the reasons why plants have a “legitimate place in art education.” Their article is a must-read if you’re interested in how drawing can be used to encourage an interest in plants.

Written as a backdrop for their current research about incorporating botany into art class, it also serves as an announcement for an exciting new exhibition for which Baldwin and Crawford are the curators. The exhibition they have created explores the idea that “art inhabits the teaching and practice of botany, and conversely botanical subjects and scientific methods have a legitimate place in teaching and practicing art.”

Lyn Baldwin and Ila Crawford have announced the call for entries for this exhibition and they would like to invite you to participate. The wonderful thing about this exhbition is that it is open to not only artists, but to botanists as well!

Here is a summary:

Art and Science: Drawing and Botany
Canadian Botanical Association
June 5-25, 2013

Invited: Artists, botanists, and groups of artists and botanists working on special projects (10 or more individuals)

Submissions: Three maximum for individuals; one per member for group submissions. Only original work will be accepted, no reproductions. Sketchbooks will be accepted. Only digital images will be accepted for the jurying process.

Entry Fee: $10 per registration ($10 covers up to three works)

Deadlines: Individual submissions (March 29, 2013), Project-based submissions (January 15, 2013)

For additional information about digital submissions, artist’s statements, insurance and more, visit Art and Science: Drawing and Botany.



Literature Cited

Baldwin, Lyn and Ila Crawford. 2012. Does the science of botany need art? Does art need the science of botany? Canadian Botanical Association / L’Association Botanique du Canada. CBA/ABC Bulletin. 45(1): 10-13. Web. http://www.tru.ca/cba-abc/art.html [accessed 16 August 2012]

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Natural History Journals

Folded books by artist Andie Thrams are on view at the Rowboat Gallery in Oregon. The collection on view was inspired by Andie’s field studies and creative projects.

Also on view are the rattan forms of basket maker and mixed media artist, Shannon Weber.

Both exhibitions can be enjoyed through September 3, 2012.

Information about Andie’s workshops, travel tours and personal creativity coaching can be viewed at Classes Near You > Northern California.

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New Jersey State MuseumBotanica Magnifica:
Photographs by Jonathan Singer

New Jersey State Museum
April 21 – August 26, 2012

Inspired by the work of both early and contemporary botanical artists, photographer Jonathan Singer set out to develop a digital photography technique that would capture a viewer’s emotions through lighting and detail, and surpass “the capability of brush and paint” (Singer et al., 2009). In 2009, Singer’s now-famous photographs were published in Botanica Magnifica: Portraits of the World’s Most Extraordinary Flowers & Plants.

Selections from the five-volume, baby elephant folio-sized Botanica Magnifica are now on view at the New Jersey State Museum. Launched earlier this year, Botanical Magnifica: Photographs by Jonathan Singer has been presented as a two-part exhibition. This approach enabled the museum to display more pieces from Singer’s collection. On view since January 28, the exhibition is now in its last three weeks and will close on August 26, 2012.

To view the spectacular photography of Jonathan Singer, whom many refer to as a modern-day John James Audubon, visit the New Jersey State Museum in Trenton, NJ Tuesday through Saturday from 9:00 AM – 4:45 PM.

Botanical Magnifica: Photographs by Jonathan Singer is curated by guest curator, Dr. Karen Reeds, a Harvard-trained historian of science and medicine and an independent exhibition curator. Reeds is also the author of When the Botanist Can’t Draw: The Case of Linnaeus, an article that was featured in the teaching and learning column last year. In her article, Dr. Reeds discusses Linnaeus’ preference for descriptive text over botanical illustrations. In November, Dr. Reeds will present Mark Catesby and his Botanical Forerunners at a special symposium celebrating the contributions made by this 18th-century artist and naturalist.



Literature Cited

Singer, Jonathan M. and W. John Kress, Marc Hachadourian. 2009. Botanica Magnifica: Portraits of the World’s Most Extraordinary Flowers & Plants. New York: Abbeville Press.

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Stachyurus praecox 1 [Stachyurus praecox Siebold & Zuccarini, Stachyuraceae (Stachyurus family)], colored pencil on paper by Wendy Hollender, 2008, 12 x 14 inches, © 2008 Brooklyn Botanic Garden, All Rights Reserved.

Portraits of a Garden, Brooklyn Botanic Garden Florilegium
Hunt Institute for
Botanical Documentation
Carnegie Melllon University
Sept. 21 – Dec. 16, 2012

The Hunt Institute would like to extend to you, this invitation to view Portraits of a Garden!

This exhibition at the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation in Pittsburgh, PA will showcase the work of 48 American botanical artists who are revitalizing the centuries-old tradition of the florilegium by creating a lasting archive of watercolors and drawings of the plants growing at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden (BBG). This selection of original artwork, on loan from the BBG’s permanent collection, will be displayed with a sampling of historical printed volumes representative of the florilegium tradition from the Hunt Institute’s Library collection.

In October, four botanical artists from the Pittsburgh area will demonstrate watercolor techniques used in botanical art. On Saturday October 6, Sue Wyble and Donna Edmonds will demonstrate a method of layering a limited palette of transparent watercolors to achieve a variety of colors. On Sunday October 7, Carol Saunders and Christine Hutson will demonstrate various wet and dry brush techniques, including limning, used to achieve fluid color and intricate form. Demonstrations will occur in the gallery. Visitors to the gallery will also have the opportunity to speak with a curator about the exhibition.


The Florilegium Tradition

By the 17th century, the introduction of rare and exotic plants through voyages of exploration created an interest in cultivating these new plants for the garden. This was accompanied by the development of many new varieties of common garden plants. Botanical gardens, initially developed in the 16th century to supply plants for medicinal use and to educate physicians, apothecaries and botanists, expanded their collections to include these plant introductions for scientific and horticultural study. Royalty and wealthy land owners also desired these new plants for inclusion in their extensive estate gardens and often commissioned artists to paint or draw the plants in their collections.

In the late 20th century, there was a resurgence of interest in the florilegium tradition by botanical artists, botanical and horticultural librarians and horticulturists at botanical and country estate gardens in England, the United States and Australia. Paintings created by florilegium artists are used for scientific study and for exhibitions that introduce the public to the importance of botanical art, gardens and herbaria.


The Brooklyn Botanic Garden Florilegium Society

The Brooklyn Botanic Garden Florilegium Society, established in 2000, was modeled after the florilegium formed five years earlier at Chelsea Physic Garden, London. The botanical artists working with the society have each been invited to produce a determined number of paintings of plants from the garden for the archive. They are creating a record of the BBG collections, including native, tropical and horticultural plants that are grown in the themed gardens and conservatory. Curators assist the society’s collectors with cuttings, and the collectors then arrange for the shipment of the plant and communication of important plant information. In addition, a dried specimen of the same plant is collected and cataloged as part of the BBG’s 250,000+ herbarium collection.

Selections from the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Florilegium collection have been exhibited biennially at the garden and also at the Shirley Sherwood Gallery, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin-Dahlem.

You are invited to view selections from the collection this Fall when they are on exhibit at The Hunt.

Learn more about BBG Florilegium artists


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The 3rd Annual Lemon Lily Festival will be held in the mountain community of Idyllwild, CA this weekend. The festival brings attention to the small populations of the rare and uncommon Lemon Lily growing in moist areas of the San Jacinto and Santa Rosa mountains in southern California.

Education and restoration are the focus of the festival this year. Local botanists will lead nature walks on the hour from 10 AM to 4 PM on Saturday, July 21 and Sunday, July 22. There will be garden club tours, events occurring throughout the town of Idyllwild, and educational activities at the Idyllwild Nature Center.

ArtPlantae will be at the Idyllwild Nature Center this weekend from
9 AM – 4 PM on Saturday and Sunday.

Spend a lovely summer weekend in the mountains.

Join us at the Lemon Lily Festival!


Visit the Lemon Lily Festival

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Become an artist/explorer in 2013!

Natural science illustrator, Mindy Lighthipe and photographer Nancy Richmond have announced their 2013 Artistic Adventure Tour to Costa Rica.

Learn about the plants and animals of Costa Rica while learning how to draw, paint and photograph the lush environment that surrounds you.

To view the complete itinerary and to view images from previous trips, click here:

Art & Photography Tour – Costa Rica

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Here is a fantastic learning opportunity at The Campbell Center for Historic Preservation Studies in Mount Carroll, IL.

Register today to secure your place in class!


Scientific Illustration for Natural History

August 13-15, 2012

Four-day course taught by scientific illustrators, Peggy MacNamara and Dan Brinkmeier. Open to participants with all levels of drawing skills or art. Choose to concentrate on simple visualization techniques leading to the development of exhibit elements, educational materials and educational activities or choose to concentrate on illustrations used in publications or electronic media. Participants have the option to work on a group project to experience working in a manner similiar to the way a museum exhibit team would function to produce a diorama, mural, or exhibit.

There is so much more to read about this course. View other key aspects in the course description.

Cost: Tuition and Materials Fee, $735
Includes housing, breakfast, lunch and snacks.
Registration Information

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