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Archive for the ‘Special Announcements’ Category

A couple of reminders for you today:


Office Hours with Artist and Teacher, Mark Granlund

Mark Granlund will host office hours for the first time this evening. Ask him questions about the process of learning traditional botanical art online. Go to the Ask Mark tab above any time this month and post your question(s) in the comment box. Check-in every Thursday evening to read Mark’s replies to your questions and comments.


Lydia Inglett’s “Anatomy of a Book” Class is Tuesday!

If you’ve entertained thoughts about writing a book, but don’t have a clue how to begin thinking about image selection, editorial content, page design, printing requirements, and marketing, you’ll want to attend Lydia’s online class. Want to know how much a book can cost? Lydia will discuss numbers with you. Want to know how to prepare digital files for publication? Lydia will tell you. In today’s world of technology, is “paper marketing” worth the effort? Find out on Tuesday.

Lydia has over 30 years of experience in the book industry. Learn from her today!

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Moments in Time: A Botanical Exhibition of Habitats and Species
Leighton Art Centre, Gallery and Museum

Botanical artist, Rayma Peterson, is one of three artists whose work is now on view at the Leighton Art Centre, Gallery and Museum. Sixteen of Rayma’s paintings capturing the plants of Alberta’s foothills, mountains, and wetlands in their native habitats will be on display through July 31, 2010. When asked how she documents plants in their natural environment, Rayma replied:

Exploring and botanizing in the spring, summer, and fall are my favorite activities. I look for close up scenes that almost jump out at me with their uniqueness and beauty, and try to share my visual experience of these scenes with the viewer. I want to show people the exquisite beauty that is underfoot in western Canada. I also take pains to ensure that the painting is botanically correct; that is, I only show plants growing together that would normally do so in a given habitat. I enjoy painting flowering plants, but also enjoy depicting their more humble relatives that may be easily overlooked, such as fungi, lichens, mosses, and even algae. My favorite habitats are calcareous springs and fens, foothills, grasslands, sub-alpine and alpine areas, wetlands, and tide pools.

I sometimes paint a habitat with my botanical subject prominent, and leave a white or very faint background towards the top. Thus I combine the habitat painting with the plant portrait to create my own style or genre. I will explore an area, taking extensive photographs, composing with my camera. Later in the studio, I combine elements and plants from various photographs, as long as they could be found in close proximity with each other in a microhabitat.

Rayma has a BSc. in botany and a BEd. in art and science. She has spent much of her life in the field, primarily in central and western Alberta. Her work is featured in Today’s Botanical Artists, by Cora B. Marcus and Libby Kyer (2008), as well as in Trees of Wagner Natural Area by the Wagner Natural Area Society, text by Patsy Cotterill (2010).

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When she was a little girl, Pam Kessler‘s father taught her how to look at plants. These innocent observations sparked an appreciation for nature in the young naturalist and marked the beginning of a career as an accomplished botanical artist. Pam’s paintings are in private and public collections such as the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation and the Shirley Sherwood Collection. Fortunately for us, a collection of Pam’s plant portraits and natural history paintings is now available in a format we can all enjoy. Pam’s detailed watercolor paintings of orchids, primroses, beets, onions, gourds, insects, feathers, and nests are featured in her new book, Response to Nature: Botanical Watercolors 1972-2010. Most of the plant portraits in this book are of orchids. Pam’s orchid paintings contain excruciating detail from the markings on the flowers, to the patterns on the leaves, to the painted plant labels written in pencil. Even plant stakes and twist ties have not gone unnoticed.

Pam’s book was designed and published by Lydia Inglett, Ltd.

Signed, limited edition copies of Response to Nature: Botanical Watercolors 1972-2010 can be purchased at ArtPlantae Books for $60.

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The botanists and botanical illustrators who have worked tirelessly to document rare plants in the Grand Canyon will share their work with the public beginning Friday July 2, 2010. Fifty drawings and paintings will be on view at Kolb Studio on the Canyon’s South Rim.

This exhibit is already receiving a lot of attention. It can be found in the Travel section of the Arizona Republic newspaper and is online at azcentral.com. It is also in the Summer 2010 issue of the South Rim Guide, one of the newsletters published by the U.S. National Park Service. An article about the Grand Canyon’s herbarium is also in the current issue of The Guide. This article provides insight to the accomplishments of former park botanists and links their accomplishments to the research projects of current botanists and botanical illustrators.

The Phemeranthus validulus (Tusayan Flameflower) by botanical artist, Joan LaMoure, is the signature piece for the exhibition. This painting, as well as the drawings and paintings of other participating artists, will illustrate a new edition of a field guide dedicated to the special status plants of the Grand Canyon.

Grand Canyon’s Green Heart: The Unsung Legacy of Plants will be at the Kolb Studio from July 2 – August 31, 2010. Admission is free. Kolb Studio is open daily.



Related

Researchers and Artists Document Grand Canyon’s Plant Jewels

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Write Your Own Story

Have you ever thought about writing a book? How about creating a book about your work as a botanical illustrator?

Many people think about writing a book and publishing it themselves. Today authors have many services available to them to make the bookmaking process easier and faster. But how do you write your own book? How do you get it published? Where do you start?

On Tuesday July 13, 2010, Lydia Inglett of Lydia Inglett, Ltd. Publishing, Design & Marketing will teach a one-hour online class in which she will explain the bookmaking process and give you the tools you need to launch your career as a published author. Lydia and her team publish and produce high quality books for authors, artists, and museums in the U.S. and abroad.

Recently, Lydia Inglett, Ltd. has produced Vanishing Light, a large format book of the fine art photography of Ben Ham, and The Art of a Sporting Life: The Wildlife Art of David Hagerbaumer by John Orrelle. Her latest publication, Response to Nature, is a stunning book featuring the orchid paintings and natural history art of botanical illustrator Pam Kessler.

In this one-hour class, Lydia will discuss:

  • What makes a beautiful, salable book
  • What a book will do for you and how it will further your career
  • How to prepare for the publication of your book
  • What to expect during the bookmaking process
  • How to evaluate the many options presented by providers of consumer and commercial book designers
  • How to market your book
  • How to begin your book project

If you have entertained thoughts about creating a book highlighting your artwork or a special project, join us on July 13th and ask the questions you have always wanted to ask about the bookmaking process.


The Details

    When: Tuesday July 13, 2010
    Time: 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. (PDT)
    Where: Online
    Cost: $35
    Extras: Registered attendees will have the opportunity to send questions to Lydia before her presentation. Attendees will also receive a task checklist to guide them during their book project.
    Bonus: Worried you cannot attend the live session? Stop worrying! This event will be recorded and will be made available to registered attendees so they can learn from Lydia at a time that is convenient for them.


REGISTER TODAY

(Registration closes Sunday July 11, 2010)

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The Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanical Garden will launch its second permaculture design course in October. This is a certificate course and participants will become certified permaculture designers upon completing the 72-hour course. This program provides a practical, project-oriented, hands-on learning experience and goes beyond mere theory. This certificate course is taught by permaculturist and horticulturist, Caitlin Bergman, and special guest lecturers.

    Permaculture Design Certificate (PDC) Course
    Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden
    Saturdays (October 2-November 20) and 1 Sunday (November 21)
    Each of the eight meetings will be in session from 8:00 AM – 6:00 PM.
    A $200 non-refundable deposit holds your place and will be deducted from the $1,200 tuition. Sign up early, class size is limited to 30 participants. To register, please call 626.821.4624 or email Jill Berry.

A detailed description of this certificate course is available here.

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Many readers have given me great information and I have learned so much. The Where Do You Live on the Web? poll will remain active in the column on your right. Please respond to this one-question poll if you have not already done so.

Thank you again for your insight. Keep it up!

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