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Archive for the ‘Special Events’ Category

Hazel West-Sherring appreciates your questions and has replied to your questions and comments.

Thank you to readers who participate in the learning opportunities presented each month with featured guests. These opportunities exist so that you can ask our guests questions directly and so you can connect with each other. Remember that your participation is always welcome. Simply join in the conversation by using the comment box below.

I would like to thank Hazel for her thoughtful replies and wonderful instruction. Hazel has spoiled us with step-by-step instructions for painting stems.

Let’s get right to it!


Reader 1
: Hello Hazel. I have been unable to find courses in botanical art without having to travel thousands of miles and having to spend thousands of dollars. I am unclear where you live, but feel sure that the ASBA (American Society of Botanical Artists), would be able to locate classes locally, since their membership is widespread as well as international. Meeting like-minded people to paint with will save lots of money and is really enjoyable. I have all of the “how to” books on learning botanical art, but seem to have lost the passion or zest or desire to do anymore painting. And doing it on my own just isn’t any fun, at all. It has now been over a year since I have done any painting of any subject (in watercolours or graphite). I think that because there is no support, no teachers, no interest from anyone, that I have lost my interest also.

Hazel: You haven’t lost your interest fully or you wouldn’t be writing! I do agree that botanical art can become a rather lonely occupation. It is hugely helpful therefore to meet others, to view their work, and receive feedback on your own work too. Initially when I first became professional in botanical art, I met with a small group of other amateur and professional painters once a month, over a period of 2 years. We didn’t do much painting, but we inspired and encouraged each other, and discussed exhibitions.


Reader 1
: I hate to give this up because I have invested a small fortune in books, painting supplies, time and talent. I feel absolutely lost. How do I find some interest in this again, or some fellow botanical artists for mutual support? Is there anyone else who has given up?

Hazel: For me, when feeling uninspired to paint, gardening or a visit to a good plant nursery often helps. Visiting galleries and exhibitions is sometimes a welcome relief when feeling confused about direction. Looking through bulb or seed catalogues is inspiring, and (perhaps) allows planning for a series of paintings?!

Start simple with a subject whose colour, texture or shape you absolutely love, and want to ‘capture’…..an apple or pear, a pretty leaf, or perhaps a single flower stem. To bring some fun into your projects, challenge composition and the way that you crop the image, or concentrate on red flowers or just yellow.


Reader 1
: Any suggestions, please?

Hazel: Get those paints out and ‘play’ with colour! Form a wish list of favourite plants, fruits or vegetables, and have a go at drawing and painting what you are inspired to portray.


Reader 2
:
You mentioned opera rose as an unexpected underwash. What are some of your other favorite colors to use as an underwash. I need to get out of my blue or yellow underwash state of mind.

Hazel: Yellows and blues are always useful as single pigment underwashes! A wash of cerulean or cobalt blue is fantastic on deep green shiny leaves, and raw sienna or gamboges works well for more olive tones. If looking for a startling bright red, an underwash of transparent orange or winsor yellow works well, identifying the underlying tones of the final red.


Reader 3
: The Auricula Collection in your gallery has a peaceful antique look to it. Did you paint your specimens on colored paper or did you paint the background? Did you use gouache or transparent watercolor to paint the deep colors in this collection?

Hazel: The Auricula Collection was painted in watercolour on Arches hot-pressed paper. Depth of colour is built up with subsequent layers of colour wash (i.e not watery but full of pigment), or by using very dry brush and small ‘feathered’ strokes. This collection has no painted background, but occasionally I am asked to paint a weak tea-coloured background in order to promote an antique feel, as in the gooseberries and currants. This was achieved by mixing up a quantity of much diluted burnt umber, applied liberally with a very large sable brush. Once dry, it can be modified if there are areas that are too dark and need lifting.


Reader 4
: What are common mistakes students make when learning how to draw, shade, color, or paint stems? I am hoping you say something that will make me realize what I am doing to make not-so-graceful, not-quite-realistic stems.

Hazel: What a good question! I think that there is much fear in painting stems, with many people fearful of wiggly edges and a thickening of the stem in the wrong places. The plant’s posture and character rely on the stem structure. It will often determine your composition, so the drawing (with good observation of how the stem behaves), must capture this character. Where does it thicken, bend or curve? How do leaf junctions work? What is the cross section? Is there colour interchange or transition of green to magenta for example, as it nears a leaf junction, flower, or roots? What is the texture, and are there additional features such as hairs, prickles or thorns?

Shading is about applying necessary light and shade, to promote 3-dimensional qualities. In general terms, if you think of the stem as a geometric tube or cylinder, and applying the light source from top left for example, break the length of the cylinder into thirds. Tonally, the left light, the center medium and the right dark.

To paint:

  • Taking care to create clean edges, underwash with a light lime green or yellow wash, allow to dry. (This first wash determines the boundaries for the subsequent paint layers to flow within…..try not to paint outside these clean edges.)
  • Paint two-thirds (the centre and right-hand side) in a darker medium tone, allow to dry.
  • With a darker tone still, then paint down the right hand side giving the stem three tones. It will look striped, so carefully blend the edges working the paint from the darker tone into the lighter tone with a damp rounded or flat brush. Where you see possibility of a highlight, use a flat brush to take away a thin area of the first light wash.
  • Use a very dark shadowy tone on the extreme right-hand edge of the stem and up and under the leaf or flower.
  • Most stems will carry colour that will be found in the flower or fruit, often magenta. Carefully observe the texture, spots or flecks, and apply.
  • Finally, use a final dilute green wash to blend it all together!


Reader 5
: When you paint on colored ground, do you paint your subject in white to establish a footprint for your painting or do you paint directly over the colored paper?

Hazel: I don’t work with coloured grounds, although I adore the work done by Mrs. Delaney on her deep black painted ground. The idea of establishing a white footprint is ideal when working with gouache, and results are delightful. A weak watercolour tea wash is about my limit!


Readers, do you have any questions or comments?

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Next week at Dijon University in France, an exciting new program will begin.

Scholars from all over the world will contribute to a seminar series about illustrations used in the service of science, specifically the relationship between scientific texts and their illustrations and the role illustrations play in the scientific process.

The seminar series will occur over three academic years (2012-2015). Topic areas include illustrations used in medicine, physics, biology and other disciplines, as well as chronological reviews of history (e.g., illustrations during the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, etc.). Leading discussions during 2011-2012 are scholars from Belgium, France, Greece, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Marie-Odile Bernez is the project coordinator of this seminar series. I had the opportunity to ask her a few question about the three-year program.


    ArtPlantae
    : What made you decide to create this seminar series?

    Marie-Odile Bernez: My training is originally as an English teacher, specializing in the 18th century and the history of ideas. My research lab/centre focuses on the relationship between text and images, and has so far restricted its studies to the arts, the cinema and literature. I thought it would be a good idea to develop interdisciplinary seminars focusing on scientific illustration, in a historical perspective, mainly to strengthen the links between hard sciences and the humanities. Because we are in Burgundy, I was also involved in the organization of a 2007 conference commemorating the tercentenary of Georges Louis Leclerc, Comté Buffon’s (1707-1788) birth and it struck me at the time how important the illustrations for the Histoire naturelle were. Burgundy was the home of Marey also, and I thought we were totally legitimate in our approach, and could build on those two “ancestors”.


    AP
    : How long did it take to launch this series and get presenters scheduled?

    MB: It didn’t take very long. In fact, I posted the first call for papers last January and was astonished at the amount of positive responses I received. I was invited to join a seminar in Spain (Minorca) last May, where I met several historians of science including Klaus Hentschel from Stuttgart, Daniela Bleichmar from California and Nick Hopwood from Cambridge, and many of their students. This gave me more contacts and, from then on, I tried to organize a schedule. The schedule for 2012/13 is almost ready too.


    AP
    : What do you hope to accomplish through this seminar series?

    MB: This is a tricky one. My first aim was to reinforce our links with the hard sciences and show how much the history of ideas depends on the developments occurring in different scientific domains. Then, I would also like to advance our understanding of the relations (between) text/image, and especially see how images illustrating scientific texts differ from other images, because their acknowledged end is to contribute to our understanding of an accompanying text, but I think also that all images, even scientific ones, are connected to a wider context, and add to the text, by expressing other things than what they are supposed to illustrate. Is this different however in the case of scientific images?


    AP
    : You mentioned there is a publication planned that will focus on the presentations presented during this series. Will the publication be in book format? In journal format (i.e., a collection of articles)? Will the publication be available to the public?

    MB: My colleagues have suggested we should publish the collection of articles, preferably in English and in a book format, so that something remains of the seminars. My intention is to collect the papers over the next two years, which should give us quite a range of subjects, but also enough material to present a coherent project to a publisher. As far as I know, the series of seminars should go on after that, if funding remains available, and so perhaps two publications might be available eventually, to cover two two-year periods.

The Department of Communication & Documentation and the fund dealing with the Scientific Collections at the University of Burgundy are pleased to announce an exhibition entitled Images in the Service of Science, in conjunction with the launch of this special seminar series about scientific illustration organized by the Interlanguages Centre. The exhibition highlights various modes of scientific illustration, from wall panels to rare books about natural history.

Images have always been essential to the sharing of scientific knowledge. At a time when 3-D imaging and virtual images dominate, it should be remembered that up until the 20th century, the only way to show to the wider public what was observed, was through illustrations.

Images in the Service of Science will be on view November 25 – December 11, 2011 in the main University Library for Arts and Humanities on the campus of Dijon University.

The scholars presenting during the inaugural year of this unique program are:

    Valerie Chansigaud (France)
    Research Focus: Issues surrounding the discovery of biodiversity and early attempts to protect it. Dr. Chansigaud is also interested in how people can transmit their knowledge about wildlife using technology.
    Presentation: Five Centuries of Naturalistic Illustrations, Between Tradition and Evolution
    November 25, 2011


    Richard Somerset (University of Nancy 2, France)

    Research Focus: Relationships between science and literature, also the history of ideas in the 19th century.
    Presentation: Telling the Story of Evolution in Images: The Popularising Work of Arabella Buckley
    January 27, 2012


    Marie-Odile Bernez (University of Burgundy, France)

    Research Focus: 18th-century Britain and the history of ideas relating to the sciences and political events. Bernez translated the works of the French Revolution by Mary Wollstonecraft and has published articles about 18th-century aspects of the development of modernity.
    Presentation: Richard Bradley and Some Pre-Evolutionist Illustrations
    January 27, 2012


    Stephen Boyd Davis (Middlesex University, UK)

    Research Focus: The visualization of historical time, chronographics, electronic visualization and the arts
    Presentation: The Eye of History: Pioneering Depictions of Historical Time
    March 9, 2012


    Eric Kindel (University of Reading, UK)

    Research Focus: The history of stenciling. Kindel also served as the principal investigator for the research project, Isotype Revisited.
    Presentation: Recording Knowledge: Christiaan Huygens and the Invention of Stencil Duplicating
    March 9, 2012


    Maria Rentetzi (National Technical University of Athens, Greece)

    Research Focus: Sociology of science
    Presentation: Visualizing Postwar High Energy Physics: A Gendered Task
    May 11, 2012


    Sigrid Leyssen (Basel University, Belgium)

    Research Focus: History and the philosophy of psychology, scientific images, theories of image perception, psychological instruments and early cinema studies.
    Presentation: Perceiving Pictures and Picturing Perception
    May 11, 2012


    Alix Cooper (State University of New York at Stony Brook, US)

    Research Focus: European history, the history of science and medicine, women’s and gender history and environmental history.
    Presentation: Picturing Nature: Gender and the Politics of Description in Eighteenth-Century Natural History
    June 15, 2012


    Valerie Morrison (University of Burgundy, France)

    Research Focus: Irish cultural history, the links between art in the field of politics and the evolution of cultural nationalism in Ireland during the 20th and 21st centuries, visual representations of the Irish by the British in the 19th and 20th centuries.
    Presentation: Photographic Portraits in Anthropological and Ethnological British Journals, 1860-1900
    June 15, 2012


Related

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A Botanical Painting Holiday with Elaine Searle

Hotel Il Collaccio
Umbria, Italy
May 2-9, 2012
Cost: Euro 960 (convert currency)

Artists of all ability levels are invited to paint the orchids and Spring flowers of Umbria with botanical artist and teacher, Elaine Searle. This 7-day trip includes five days of instruction, plus a full day trip that includes a visit to a national park, shopping at a market in a medieval town, and lunch at the gastronomy capital of the region. Non-painting companions are also welcome. There is plenty to see and do in this region of Italy.

Click on the image above to download a color brochure containing a complete itinerary, photos of the 2011 trip, and a helpful FAQ section.

This botanical art holiday has also been listed in Classes Near You > Italy.


Related

Elaine Searle Shares Her Passion for Botanical Art, Discusses How Students Learn Best

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Spend the afternoon at the Mobile Museum of Art!

Learn about ornithological art and visit the exhibition about John James Audubon , on view now through January 8, 2012.

Mobile Museum of Art
www.MobileMuseumOfArt.com
The Mobile Museum of Art is the largest museum along the Gulf Coast from New Orleans to Tampa. The museum offers classes for children and adults. They are currently accepting proposals for educational programs for adults.

    Audubon-Inspired: Birds in Art, from the Photograph to the Easel – Sunday, November 20, 2011; 2 PM. Ornithological artists, William C. Morris and Terry Hartley, will share their experiences drawing, painting and photographing birds. Attendees are invited to bring a sketchbook and follow along as Morris and Hartley discuss how to capture the anatomical features and colors of birds. For more information, click here.

This information has also been added to Classes Near You > Alabama.

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Kelly Houle at work in her studio.

Natural history artist, calligrapher and science educator, Kelly Houle, is creating a large-scale illuminated manuscript based on Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species. Each page will be designed as a work of art. All text will be written by hand and natural history illustrations will be illuminated with iridescent watercolors and 23-karat gold. The completed manuscript will be 22 x 30 inches and is expected to have 300 pages and over 500 illuminations.

Kelly has established working relationships with biologists and evolution experts from all over the world who will advise her during this project (see timeline). Kelly’s goal is to enhance public understanding of Darwin’s text. She explains:

I believe that the main barrier to understanding The Origin of Species is the perceived difficulty of the writing. The concepts themselves are simple, yet profound. I hope to improve understanding of The Origin by integrating poetic arrangements of Darwin’s words with visually striking presentations of the evidence. I will use elements of poetry, traditional realism, lettering art, graphic design, and fine art illustration in the service of communicating one of the most important ideas in science. 

Kelly has been raising funds on the funding website Kickstarter. Donors donating $10 or more will receive gifts of art related to The Illuminated Origin of Species. All donors will have their names written in a special section of the illuminated manuscript. In addition to individual donations, Kelly is looking for an institutional donor to fund the entire Illuminated Origin of Species project in exchange for the completed manuscript.

To read more about this project, watch a short video and to make a donation, visit the The Illuminated Origin of Species.


Related



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While this is a busy time of year, there is always time to enjoy botanical art. Below are a few opportunities to view drawings and paintings by contemporary botanical artists.

This information has also been added to the Exhibits to Visit section in the column to your right.


Put Yourself on the Map

Results from the ongoing Reader Satisfaction Survey show the Exhibits to Visit section is popular with readers. Help fellow artists, naturalists, educators and collectors find you. Send your announcements to education@artplantae.com.

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Recently ArtPlantae brought its “Know Plants” message to 12,000 Girl Scouts at the Girltopia: The World of Girl event at the Los Angeles Convention Center.

There really were 12,000 Girl Scouts there. The aisles were filled with people all day and there were only two moments where there was no one at the booth. Both moments lasted less than 60 seconds. I am not exaggerating.

There were many things to do at Girltopia — from seeing plants at ArtPlantae, to attending Cookie University, to taking leadership workshops, to interacting with technology, to taking one’s photo with Justin Timberlake and Johnny Depp (thanks to Madame Tussauds Wax Museum in Hollywood).

Here are a few photos I managed to take at this incredible event.


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