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Archive for the ‘Special Announcements’ Category

© Heeyoung Kim. All rights reserved (NYBG Media Gallery)

Botanical artists from the United States, Australia, Brazil, Israel, South Korea, South Africa, and the United Kingdom are helping scientists document at-risk plants before they are lost forever.

Losing Paradise? Endangered Plants Here and Around the World will travel to the Arthur and Janet Ross Gallery at the New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) and be on view from May 6 through July 25, 2010. This exhibition is the culmination of a three-year collaborative effort between the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA) and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. Gallery hours are 10 AM – 6 PM. The exhibition is included in the price of admission to NYBG.

Five exhibiting artists will teach special workshops in conjunction with the Losing Paradise? exhibition. You will want to save these dates!

  • Master Class with John Pastoriza-Pinol: Tulips in New York – Wednesday thru Friday, May 5-7, 2010; 10:00 AM – 4:30 PM (104BIL 509). Learn the intricacies of achieving fine detail with watercolor by applying a variety of advanced techniques used by contemporary botanical artists. Location: Midtown Education Center in Manhattan
  • Master Class with Bobbi Angell: Drawing the Microscopic View – Monday thru Wednesday, June 14-16, 2010; 10:00 AM – 4:30 PM (104BIL 515). Learn how to translate your observations through a microscope into botanical illustrations in pen and ink. Work with plant material and create detailed illustrations of flowers and fruit. Location: NYBG
  • Techniques: Advanced Watercolor Painting with Rose Pellicano – Five Tuesdays, May 18 – June 15; 1 PM – 4 PM (104BIL 351, see prerequisite). Location: Midtown Education Center in Manhattan.
  • Drawing Roses in the Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden with Carol Wooding – Saturday & Sunday, June 19-20, 2010; 10:30 AM – 4:00 PM (104BIL 352)
  • Drawing Vegetables in the Ruth Bea Howell Family Garden with Wendy Hollender – Two Saturdays, July 17 & 24, 2010; 10:00 AM – 3:30 PM (111BIL 209)

Please go to www.nybg.org/AdultEd for details and to register online.


Related

The ASBA announces a blog dedicated to the Losing Paradise? exhibition.

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© Corinne Lapen-Cohen. All rights reserved

Botanical artist, Corinne Lapin-Cohen, will have a one-woman exhibition featuring over 60 botanical watercolor paintings and metalpoint pieces in the historic 18th-century Benedict family homestead situated on over 4,000 acres of fields and woodlands.

The Discoveries…Botanical Explorations exhibition will be held May 23 – September 6, 2010 at The Gallery in the Park, Ward Pound Ridge Reservation in Cross River, NY. The opening reception will be on May 23 from 2 PM – 4 PM.

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Two summers ago, Wendy Hollender picked strawberries near the home of a fellow botanical artist. She immediately fell in love with farming and everything associated with connecting with the land and growing fruit and vegetables. Back home in Manhattan, Wendy kept having visions of a country farm where she could work the land, teach botanical art classes, and open a store with a botanical theme.

The following summer, Wendy looked for winterized homes. Realtors kept showing her weekend houses, but what Wendy really wanted was a farm where she could grow fruits, vegetables and teach classes. After eight months of searching, Wendy found her 4-acre homestead and 1860 farmhouse near the strawberry farm that first inspired her. Hollengold Farm is located in Accord, NY in a valley of farms with the Catskill Mountains on one side and the Shawangunk Mountains on the other.

Both of Wendy’s adult children studied permaculture, so they designed the 3,000 square foot vegetable garden established in the farm’s first year. About to enter its second growing season, the vegetable garden has been redesigned and is now one acre. Only hand crops will be grown and this means machinery will not be used to harvest the crops.

Managing a large garden is no easy task. Volunteers, family and friends helped to get the farm started and volunteers and interns keep the farm running. Requiring special attention and planning is the management of the farm’s water use. Last year drip hoses and sprinklers were used. Now that the garden has grown to over 10 times its original size, managing and assessing how water is harvested and used on site is a never-ending task. Recently, a new roof catchment system was established. A new roof was placed on the barn and this roof directs water runoff into special catchment buckets. This water is then used to irrigate growing crops.

Before Wendy purchased Hollengold Farm, the four-acre property was a horse farm. In fact, the barn used to be a horse stable. The former stable is currently being renovated to become the center of activity at the farm. The renovated barn will serve as the location for plant propagation, studio space, gallery space, a farm stand, a commercial kitchen, and a shop for botanical-themed items. Wendy’s daughter is a chef and she will soon be preparing tasty fresh entrees. A masonry oven is being built to make wood-fired pizza. She will also can fruits and vegetables to sell at the new store. Plans are in motion to create a “seed to grain” learning experience for children from nearby school districts. This program will be based on the children’s story The Little Red Hen and show students how seeds become wheat, how wheat becomes flour, and how flour becomes bread.

The planned studio and gallery space are where Wendy will teach her botanical art classes and showcase her work and the work of her students. Wendy is currently teaching one-day workshops at the farm. A popular teacher in-person and here at ArtPlantae Today (Wendy’s Ask The Artist Q&A is the most read article of all time), her popularity is sure to increase when her second book is released later this summer. When Wendy sat down to talk about the farm, she also talked about Botanical Drawing in Color: A Basic Guide to Mastering Realistic Form and Naturalistic Color. Here is what she had to say…

ArtPlantae: How did the idea for a new book materialize?
Wendy Hollender: I just finished the first book. I contacted Faber-Castell to tell them I recommended their pencils in my workbook. They invited me to do a demonstration at a trade convention. At the convention, many publishers were present and they expressed an interest in my workbook. Random House asked for a proposal and asked for a completed book within four months of accepting my proposal.

AP: Will the new book be similar in design to your first book? Will there be many steps broken down with descriptive illustrations?
WH: Yes. The steps will be broken down and will be very descriptive. Each step will be broken down to minute detail. Watching artists use the first book, I realized what I left out. Random House had a 25,000 word requirement, so this book has more text than the first book. I loved writing the book. I wrote in the morning. At first I began writing about my personal experiences with botanical art. I wasn’t sure if this was acceptable, so I told them what I had been doing. I was told to write the book the way I wanted to write it. In the end, all of the content and concepts I created stayed in the book. Only a few minor changes were made.

AP: What topics do you discuss in the new book?
WH: Perspective, plant structure, composition, color, drawing in the field, working with a microscope and how to draw white flowers on a white background.

AP: What would you like people to know about your new book?
WH: What is exciting about my book, and why Random House wanted to publish it, is that it focuses on botanical drawing in color. Colored pencil isn’t just a medium to use, it is also a learning tool. It allows you to teach drawing skills and teach about color at the same time.

Wendy also mentioned her new book took six months to write and six months to edit. With this book, Wendy hopes to take the struggle out of creating botanical art for artists of all levels. If you own a copy of Botanical Drawing: A Beginner’s Guide you already know how well Wendy can teach without even being in the same room with you. Join us as we anticipate the July 2010 release of Botanical Drawing in Color.


UPDATE
:
Wendy Hollender to Discuss “Botanical Drawing” Live!
August 18, 2010

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Today is the last day of National Environmental Education Week. Celebrate EE Week through the weekend with ArtPlantae Books at the Green Scene Garden Show. We’re there today and tomorrow from 10 AM – 4 PM.

Pick up a brochure about TheMulch.com to learn more about this resource for gardeners. View and purchase complete sets of Marianne Wallace’s America’s series. Get a copy of Water: The Epic Struggle for Wealth, Power, and Civilization.

Save 20% off on books and journaling supplies this weekend. This offer is only good during Green Scene. Hope to see you on the Orchard Lawn!

The Green Scene Garden Show is located at the Fullerton Arboretum on the campus of California State University, Fullerton.

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National Environmental Education Week begins today!

Meet natural science illustrator, Christine Elder, whose specialty is teaching children about nature. She will be holding office hours this week at ArtPlantae Today and will be answering questions from readers. Read more about Christine in the following post.

The theme for EE Week is Be Water and Energy Wise. There is no better way to begin this week than with telling you about Shane Burckle the force behind local outreach programs designed to educate the public about our global water crisis. The book, Water: The Epic Struggle for Wealth, Power, and Civilization, comes with Shane’s enthusiastic recommendation.

On behalf of all contributors to EE Week at the national level and here at ArtPlantae, thank you for your attention and for your participation in our collective efforts to increase environmental literacy.



UPDATE:
Feature Articles & Interviews Posted During EE Week 2010

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National Environmental Education Week kicks off on Sunday. There will be many exciting things to learn during EE Week at ArtPlantae, at EEWeek.org, and at various events across the county.

You will be informed about interesting resources throughout the week here on the blog, on Twitter, and on Facebook. Remember that this site will be updated daily, so you will receive an update everyday from April 11-17.

There will be plenty of opportunity to interact with each other this week and it is hoped you take advantage of this opportunity to communicate with each other through the tools at ArtPlantae Today. Since the blog is home to us and our official gathering place, it is hoped we can establish lines of communication in this comfortable setting. If posting a comment makes you nervous, please know that you can post using just your initials and you do not have to use your full name.

ArtPlantae Books will close EE Week at the Green Scene Garden Show at the Fullerton Arboretum. This popular event will occur April 17-18. Bring your wagon!

Where else will ArtPlantae Books be this month? Visit the SoCal Bookscene website for more information.

What’s Next?

  • Meet Christine Elder
  • Learn how a science educator turned an idea into a series of popular field guides.
  • Learn how enthusiasm, a good memory, and determination created unique service-learning opportunities for kids and adults.
  • A botanical illustrator paints desert wildflowers from Calico to the Coachella Valley.
  • Plus so much more!

And as always, please share this information with others who may be interested.
Thank you!

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National Environmental Education Week begins on Sunday, April 11th. Special articles and learning opportunities will be coming your way. Please tell friends, students, teachers, and your favorite naturalist about the activities here at ArtPlantae and at EEWeek.org.

Here are more hints about what is to come during EE Week at ArtPlantae:

  • Contemporary botanical artists follow in the footsteps of their predecessors and document plants for future generations.
  • What’s happening at the 10th largest herbarium in the United States?
  • See what a rain garden is doing for a major public garden.
  • How did an East Coast artist capture California’s desert plants?
  • A scientific illustrator provides suggestions and answers your questions about connecting kids with nature through drawing.

Have you signed up to the RSS feed to receive daily updates during EE Week?

EE Week at ArtPlantae begins to materialize on Thursday. See you then!

Download this flyer

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