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Archive for the ‘Special Announcements’ Category

Edible Plants Illustrated
Florida Society of
Botanical Artists
Venice Art Center
Venice, Florida
April 9 – May 3, 2012

The Florida Society of Botanical Artists invite you to their new exhibition!

Botanical art is enjoying a renaissance and, although it often depicts far-flung marvels of the botanical world, this juried exhibition of fifteen contemporary practitioners illustrates some common and uncommon plants people have used for food both in the past and the present.

The role of botanical art is to blend the scientific study of plants with artistic presentation. The 38 works in Edible Plants Illustrated were created using watercolor, colored pencil, graphite and silverpoint, and show the wide range of media employed by today’s botanical artists.

Founded in 2005, the Florida Society of Botanical Artists (FSBA) is a chapter of the American Society of Botanical Artists.

Meet the artists this Friday at the opening reception. A reception will be held on April 13, 2012 from 5-7 PM at the Venice Art Center.

Venice Art Center
390 South Nokomis Avenue
Venice, Florida 34285
April 9 – May 3, 2012
View map


Also See…

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By Bonnie S. Driggers


Botanical Artists for Education and the Environment (BAEE)
, a group of botanical artists primarily in the Mid-Atlantic area of the US, have undertaken a project to publish a book of paintings about native plants. Because the destruction of native plants continues at an alarming rate, we hope our book will increase the public’s knowledge and encourage use and conservation of this vital part of our natural heritage.

The working title of the book is American Botanicals: Plants Native to the Mid-Atlantic. The book will reproduce original works of art and include text focused on the importance of each plant as a native. A jury will select artwork from digital images. The book is scheduled to be published in the fall of 2013; an exhibition will follow at the U.S. Botanic Garden in Washington, DC, in the spring of 2014. Artists will donate use of their work but retain the copyright; BAEE will retain the copyright to the book. See contact information below for more details.

Countess Clarissa Bonde, one of our Board Members and Honorary Chairman of Fund Raising, has arranged with the U.S. Botanic Garden to exhibit our paintings beginning in late spring or summer of 2014. Among the judges are Holly Shimizu, Executive Director of the USBG; Bill McLaughlin, Curator of Plants at the USBG; and Dick Rauh, Immediate Past President of the ASBA. One additional judge may be added. We are fortunate to have the support and guidance of Anne-Marie Evans of England.

Call for Entries:

    Eligibility: We are inviting all artists in the Mid-Atlantic region who are members of American Society of Botanical Artists or other botanical art organizations to participate.

    Subject: Plants native to the Mid-Atlantic defined for this project as including the states of Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, District of Columbia, Virginia, and West Virginia.

    Media Accepted: watercolor, graphite, pen & ink, egg tempera, colored pencil

    Submission: January 1, 2013. Entry fee: $25 for up to 5 paintings (only 3 will be selected for the book). Digital files only: 360 dpi, 8″ high, TIFF files only. Portrait orientation preferred.

    Presentation: Paintings selected should not be matted or framed; BAEE will arrange to have this done for purposes of conformity. Artwork should be created 100% life-size. Very small plants may be enlarged provided a scale is given. For the book, we hope to reduce paintings by no more than 50%. Page size in the book will be 8.5″ x 11″.

    Contact: If you are interested or would like more information, such as a list of desirable native plants, more detailed project specifications, or a brochure that gives more information about the project, please contact Bonnie Driggers, BAEE President, or Esther Carpi.

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Arisaema triphyllum © Ann Biggs. All Rights Reserved

Spring Show for The Philadelphia Society of Botanical Illustrators
The Station Gallery
Greenville, DE
April 9-28, 2012

The Philadelphia Society of Botanical Illustrators (PSBI) invite you to their annual juried exhibition!

Beginning today, thirty-six paintings by twenty artists will be on view at The Station Gallery in Greenville, Delaware.

An opening reception will be held this Friday, April 13, 2012 from 5-8 PM. Meet the artists, ask questions about their process and learn more about the PSBI, their outreach projects and the classes taught by members.

The Philadelphia Society of Botanical Illustrators was founded in 1997 to celebrate the achievements of its members, to provide exhibition opportunities for members and to introduce new audiences to botanical illustration.

Last month, the PSBI received an award at the Philadelphia International Flower Show for Best Achievement, Horticultural Art and Illustration for their exhibition featuring the plants of Hawaii. Learn more about The Flora of Hawaii: Indigenous, Endemic or Invasive on the PSBI blog.

Cattleya aclandiae © Donelda La Brake. All Rights Reseved

The Station Gallery is located at 3922 Kennett Pike, Greenville, Delaware. Directions, gallery hours and information about how to receive information about upcoming shows can be viewed here.

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Drawing Nature: Botanical Art in Colored Pencil is now on view at the Mahoney Library Gallery on the Santa Rosa Junior College Petaluma Campus.
This exhibition opened on April 2 and continues through May 25, 2012.

Drawing Nature is a group exhibition of botanical art created by students of
Nina Antze, a member of the American Society of Botanical Artists. Antze studied illustration at the New York Botanical Garden (NYBG), and her drawings have been exhibited at NYBG, as well as at the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens, and the gallery at Filoli.

Artists participating in Drawing Nature are Nina Antze, Adrianne Bowes, Suzanne Cogen, Victoria A. Kochergin, Rebecca Lichau, Jackie Lueder, Joanne Page, Elizabeth Peyton, Linda Rouse, Ginny Ritama Spencer, Vi Strain, Christine Woodward, Nancy Wheeler, and Barbara Wysham.

The Mahoney Library Gallery is located at 680 Sonoma Mountain Parkway. Gallery hours are Monday through Thursday, 8 AM to 9 PM and Saturday, 10 AM – 3 PM. For more information, call (707) 778-3972.

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On Monday, the Reeves-Reed Arboretum in Summit, NJ revealed
The Magnified Eye: Contemporary Botanical Portraiture in collaboration with Susan Frei Nathan Fine Works on Paper, LLC. This new exhibition features the work of fifteen international artists who have used various techniques and media to create their drawings and paintings of plants. Visitors can study each artist’s technique up close by using the magnifying glasses that will be on hand.

Artists participating in The Magnified Eye are:

Additional information, including an exhibition flyer, are available here. This exhibition will be on view in the Wisner House through June 15, 2012.

The Reeves-Reed Arboretum is an estate garden listed on the National and State Registers of Historic Places. The arboretum hosts programs for families, children, school groups and adults. Readers of this website might be particularly interested in the workshop Tree ID for Beginners scheduled for April 19, 2012.


Related

Martin J. Allen Discusses the Power of Seeing

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By Heeyoung Kim


Heeyoung Kim
, a botanical artist from Illinois, has been awarded a gold medal from the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) at the 2012 RHS Botanical Art Exhibition in London.

Twenty-five botanical artists from six countries (Australia, England, Japan, Scotland, Turkey, and USA) were selected by the RHS exhibition committee. Artwork is judged as a group of drawings or paintings making up a complete exhibit. If one or two works in a group are of a lower standard than the others, this affects the way the entire exhibit is judged. Particular credit is given for botanical accuracy, exact color reproduction and attention to detail. Higher awards tend to be given to exhibits illustrating a particular theme or plant family. Gold medals are awarded only to exhibits of outstanding and consistent excellence. Seven gold medals were awarded this year.

Heeyoung’s collection of paintings focused on the common, rare and endangered plants of the American prairie. Since the late 1800s, the fertile tallgrass prairie has been converted into an intensive crop producing area. This region of the US is called America’s “breadbasket” or “corn belt”. What was once the largest ecosystem of the American continent with a biodiversity rivaling the richest rainforests, has yielded to commercial agriculture leaving its flora and fauna in peril. Heeyoung is devoted to documenting these rapidly disappearing plants. She draws public attention to this environmental issue by exhibiting her paintings both locally and internationally.

In this year’s RHS show, Heeyoung exhibited six watercolor paintings and two mixed media paintings featuring watercolor and graphite. Each were drawn and color recorded in situ and finished in the studio after extensive research and observation. Sometimes it took years to follow up on the full life cycles of a plant. Other times it took years of waiting for rare plants to grow and to bloom. Heeyoung says, “It was a great joy to be able to paint the unearthly beauty of Fringed Gentian (Gentianopsis crinita) and the two iconic yellow flowers of the prairie, Prairie Dock (Silphium terebinthinaceum) and Compass Plant (Silphium laciniatum).”

“Well done!”
This was the reaction visitors had to Heeyoung’s paintings at the RHS show. Visitors understood what a gold medal represented and repeatedly expressed enthusiasm and appreciation for the story Heeyoung was telling and how she told it through her paintings. For two full days, Lindley Hall was filled with the joy and the excitement of botanical artists, art lovers and plant lovers in attendance.

Heeyoung says the RHS exhibition was a great learning experience through which she gained confidence as a professional botanical artist.

Heeyoung teaches botanical art in the Chicago area at Noyes Cultural Arts Center, in Evanston, Illinois. Eager to be involved in any kind of activity involving plants and art, whether it be speaking with other artists and plant enthusiasts, sharing her work with garden clubs, or conducting technique demonstrations to art groups, Heeyoung believes showing her artwork and sharing her enthusiasm in every possible way helps make people more aware of the current crisis facing native plants.

View Heeyoung’s paintings of America’s prairie plants at www.PrairiePlantArt.com.


Related

Exhibiting botanical art at an RHS show

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Rubus idaeus (Raspberries) by Denise Walser-Kolar

The success of the Small Works exhibition at the 2008 conference of the American Society of Botanical Artists in Pasadena, CA, inspired the inclusion of a similar exhibition at the 2011 conference held in Boston this past Fall. This non-juried exhibition of artwork small enough to fit in carry-on luggage, was organized by the New England Society of Botanical Artists (NESBA), hosts of the 2011 meeting. A color catalog about the exhibition has been created by NESBA and the American Society of Botanical Artists and can be previewed online.

Small Works 2011 is a 118-page collection of drawings and paintings by ASBA members. This self-published special collection can be purchased at Blurb.com for $29.95 (plus S&H).

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