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Archive for the ‘Special Announcements’ Category

Artist Mark Granlund is having a studio sale this weekend. Oil paintings, cards, mini-books, botanical art, nature art, food art, chicken art, and works inspired by his book, The Book of Bartholomew will be available for sale.

Visit Mark’s website to view a gallery of his work and to learn about his online drawing classes. Mark was the Feature Artist for July 2010 and held office hours during this month. Learn more about Mark and the conversation he had with readers here.

Mark’s gallery sale will be held this weekend at 1409 Hubbard Avenue, Saint Paul, MN 55104 (get a map).

Sale hours are: April 29 (6-9 PM), April 30 (10 AM – 4 PM).


Also See…

The Artist’s Brain (Mark’s blog)

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© Karen Luglein. All rights reserved

Green Currency: Plants in the Economy, a juried exhibition of original contemporary botanical art depicting plants of economic significance, opens today and runs through July 31st at The New York Botanical Garden.

This exhibition is hosted by the New York Botanical Garden and curated by the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA). The exhibit catalog features each of the 43 pieces of art in the exhibition, as well as background information about each plant, artist bios, and information about each juror.

The corn painting above was created by illustrator, Karen Kluglein. Karen shows the luminous effect of watercolor on vellum in her painting of Corn (Zea mays). An instructor at The New York Botanical Garden, Kluglein received ASBA’s 2010 Award for Excellence in Botanical Art Painting and Best in Show at ASBA’s 13th Annual International Juried Exhibition at the Horticultural Society of New York.

Learn more about this exciting exhibition at http://www.asbagreencurrency.blogspot.com.


Also see…

“Green Currency: Plants in the Economy” Opens This Month

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Welcome to EE Week 2011!

National Environmental Education Week (EE Week) is organized by the National Environmental Education Foundation to connect K-12 teachers and their students to environmental resources informing the public about environmental issues affecting all of us. ArtPlantae is proud to once again serve as a national partner for EE Week.

This year’s theme inspires us to discover our oceans and to become more aware of the many ways we are connected to them, even though we may live miles and miles away. This year, like last year, I have had the opportunity to work with enthusiastic individuals committed to helping ArtPlantae show connections between plants, art, and the theme for EE Week. Please join me in welcoming each contributor as they are introduced.

We will discuss several interesting topics this week and learn a lot.

Let’s begin!

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A quick reminder that EE Week begins on Sunday and, like last year, I will post to this site everyday during EE Week. This means I will post daily through Saturday April 16, 2011.

This year’s EE Week theme is Ocean Connections. The generous and enthusiastic contributors to EE Week 2011 have made it possible to link plants, art, and the ocean in support of this year’s theme. I hope you enjoy learning from them as much as I have.

You are invited to participate in a live conversation with author Glynis Ridley on the Facebook page on April 16th. Glynis will discuss her new book, The Discovery of Jeanne Baret: A Story of Science, the High Seas, and the First Woman to Circumnavigate the Globe. The story of Jeanne Baret is fascinating and Glynis conducted several layers of research to piece together Baret’s story. You don’t want to miss this conversation. Mark your calendar and please join us on the Discussion page at 11 am (PST) / 2 pm (EST) on April 16.

If you’re in southern California, consider kicking off EE Week with ArtPlantae at the Spring Fair & Art Festival at Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary this weekend, April 9-10 (9 AM – 4 PM, daily). There will be live music, art & craft demonstrations, guided nature hikes, and more. Tucker Wildlife is operated by the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics at California State University, Fullerton.

Can’t kick-off EE Week with a Spring festival? Then consider ending EE Week at the 25th Annual Avocado Festival in downtown Fallbrook in north San Diego County. ArtPlantae will on the Avenue of the Arts during this one-day festival occurring on Sunday April 17 from 9 AM – 5 PM. The Avocado Festival brings in about 70,000 people each year, so come early, bring your walking shoes, and your appetite!


And don’t forget your map…

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Joyce Westner, President, NESBA

For the first time, the Annual Meeting and Conference of the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA) will be held in scenic New England. The local chapter, the New England Society of Botanical Artists (NESBA), is planning to make the October conference memorable! To help botanical artists decide whether they would like to attend, or what they might do if they’re already planning to attend, NESBA has created a Boston ASBA 2011 blog. Subscribe to this new blog to find out about the terrific instructors, wonderful classes, field trips, forums and demonstrations that will define this memorable experience.

During the conference, the public is invited to view the Small Works exhibit at the Boston Marriott Newton, Oct 27-29, 2011. While small works are required to be no larger than 9″ x 12″, the magnitude of the art itself will be limited only by the artist’s imagination and skill.

The New England Society of Botanical Artists is a chapter of the ASBA and has 120 members. Members’ work is featured annually at the Boston Flower and Garden Show and other venues throughout New England. Most NESBA members live in six New England States and a few mid-West states as well.

Learn more about NESBA online at http://www.nesbaartists.blogspot.com.

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Green Currency: Plants in the Economy, a juried exhibition of original contemporary botanical art depicting plants of economic significance, opens April 20, 2011 and runs through July 31 at The New York Botanical Garden (NYBG). Forty-three pieces of art featuring plants used for medicine, food, clothing and shelter will be on display as part of this exhibition organized and hosted by The New York Botanical Garden and curated by the American Society of Botanical Artists.

The NYBG Institute of Economic Botany (IEB) has focused research on the relationship between plants and people since its founding in 1981, so the selection of economic botany as the theme for the first botanical art exhibition organized by the Garden was fitting. The ASBA with its headquarters located at the Garden has over 14 years experience curating juried international exhibitions making the partnership between the two organizations on Green Currency a natural.

Green Currency capitalizes on the beauty of nature and the mastery of today’s most skilled botanical artists to portray plants upon which people depend for basic necessities and which fuel commerce around the world. ASBA member artists from the United States and 6 other countries, a number of whom are widely collected, are represented in the show. Works in watercolor, gouache, colored pencil, graphite, acrylic, oil, aquatint, and copperplate engraving demonstrate the variety of media employed by contemporary botanical artists, who create art that is both beautiful and botanically accurate.

An audio tour, interpretive material and a catalog have been produced to accompany the exhibition. Using their cell phones, “visitors will be able to listen to what each artist has to say about their experience in capturing that plant” explains Woodin. Signage throughout the Garden ties the living collection to plants featured in the exhibition. The catalog which has “a bit of an interesting story about each plant in the show, artists’ bios and bios for all the jurors” continues Woodin, will be available at the NYBG Shop in the Garden.

Featured on the catalog cover, Esther Klahne’s contemporary watercolor portrayal of cotton (Gossypium herbaceum), contrasts the delicate brittleness of the dried leaves with the fluffy softness of the ball of fibers, and captures reflected light and color throughout the composition. A graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, she earned a Certificate in Botanical Art through the Wellesley College Friends of Horticulture Botanical Art Program in Massachusetts. According to the International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC), cotton fibers are used to make textiles for clothing, furniture and upholstery, medical applications such as bandages and swabs, and pulp for paper. In fact much of the paper on which botanical art is done is 100% cotton rag. Cotton seeds are used as animal feed, to condition soils, and in the production of cottonseed oil. The USDA reports that the United States produced 12.4 million bales (480 pounds/bale) of cotton in 2009 with the largest harvests coming from Texas, Georgia and Arkansas. The U.S. is the third largest producer behind India and China and the largest exporter according to the ICAC.

Inquiries regarding the purchase of artwork should be directed to asbaexhibitions@aol.com.

The New York Botanical Garden is located at Bronx River Parkway and Fordham Road, Bronx, New York.

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Linda Miller with Executive Director, Carl V. Curnutte, III.

A Special Honor
Botanical artist Linda C. Miller has been named the first “Artist in Residence” at The Elizabethan Gardens in Manteo, NC in recognition of her dedication and history with the Garden. In 2009, Linda launched the Garden’s botanical art classes and has been praised for both her teaching skills and the way she encourages students.

Linda has exhibited her work in the Mid Atlantic Region and in the Northeast. Her artwork has also appeared in national publications. An exhibition of Linda’s work will be on display at The Elizabethan Gardens in the Reception Hall through April.

The Garden’s Executive Director, Carl V. Curnutte III said, “We are thrilled to have Linda Miller be our first of many ‘Artists in Residence’ for The Elizabethan Gardens. Her work is outstanding and we are privileged to have her join us as the first of, hopefully, many artists.”

Of her appointment, Miller said, “I am so honored with the first appointment of  ‘Artist In Residence’ for I love the garden and its people.  The entire team is very special and (has) so much energy – positive, can do, lets-get-it-done energy.  I know that their vision and their talents are going to grow the garden in so many ways and I am so happy to play a part at this time.” 

The public is invited to meet with Linda at The Elizabethan Gardens when she launches her residency on Tuesday April 5, 2011 (10 AM – 2 PM). On this special day, Linda will begin a series of ten original paintings for the Garden.

Linda’s botanical art classes can be viewed on her website and in the Classes Near you sections for Virginia and North Carolina. Linda’s upcoming schedule of classes includes:

  • History of Botanical Art: An Artist’s Perspective – Tuesday, April 12, 2011; 1:30 – 2:30 PM. Embark on a visual history of botanical art from the earliest surviving artifacts to today’s contemporary artists. Lecture will be hosted by the Herb Society and held at Fellowship Hall of Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church, 7479 Richmond Road, Norge, VA. This event is free and open to the public.
  • Botanical Watercolor Workshop with Linda Miller – April 28 – 30, 2011; 9:30 AM – 3:30 PM. Learn how to preserve and interpret the flowers and plants of The Elizabethan Garden. Participants will be lead on a tour of the Garden to select their specimens. They will then learn how to observe, draw, and paint their chosen subject. All levels of artist welcome. Workshop fees include admission to the Garden. This workshop can be taken as a 2-day class or a 3-day class. View course details and fees
  • Art in the Garden: A Botanical Art Workshop for Children – Saturday, May 21, 2011; 10 AM – 12 PM. Freedom Park, Williamsburg, VA. Free for children 10 & older. Contact Williamsburg Botanical Garden for more information.

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