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Archive for the ‘Special Events’ Category

This Fall, ArtPlantae will introduce its educational goals to two new audiences. The first will be attendees at the California Science Education Conference (October 21-23, 2011). ArtPlantae is proud to contribute as a Supporting Sponsor for this event.

On the following weekend, ArtPlantae will introduce 10,000 enthusiastic Girl Scouts to its ‘Know Plants’ message and the world of botanical art at the sold out Girltopia Expo. At this event, Girl Scouts will take part in educational “funshops” where they will learn about the environment, arts & culture, business smarts, science, technology, engineering, math, leadership, and issues related to wellness and healthy living. Girl Scouts will also participate in hands-on activities provided by exhibitors.

Did you get tickets to this event before they sold out two months early?
Visit ArtPlantae in the Arts Alley at Girltopia: The World of Girl hosted by the Girl Scouts of Greater Los Angeles.

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Artists for Conservation, the world’s leading group of artists supporting the environment, will host its first annual Artists for Conservation Festival in Vancouver, Canada from November 5-13, 2011. Renowned nature artist, Robert Bateman, will give the opening address. Nature and wildlife artists from around the world will be in attendance. Festival visitors will be able to participate in workshops, view nature and wildlife art, watch painting demonstrations and learn about conservation issues.

For detailed festival information, visit the festival webpage.


Artists for Conservation Festival 2011

Grouse Mountain
North Vancouver, Canada
November 5-13, 2011

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The 14th Annual International Juried Botanical Art Exhibition opens this week at The Horticultural Society of New York. This exhibition is a collaborative effort between The Horticultural Society of New York and the American Society of Botanical Artists.

This exhibition featuring paintings and drawings of trees, fungi, vines, fruit, vegetables, and flowers will be on view September 21 – November 23, 2011. The Gallery at The Hort is free and open to the public Monday through Friday from 12 – 6 PM.

Botanical art workshops will be taught by botanical artists Dr. Dick Rauh, John Pastoriza-Piñol, and Wendy Hollender during the exhibition. Information about these workshops is available below. Workshop information has also been posted to Classes Near You > New York.


Horticultural Society of New York

www.hsny.org
These workshops will be offered during the 14th Annual International Juried Exhibition of Botanical Art that will be on view from September 21 – November 23, 2011 in The Gallery at The Hort.

  • Exploring the Science of Botanical Art – Monday, October 17, 2011. Explore the botany and the art of plants with botanical artist and botanist, Dr. Dick Rauh. Learn about the life cycles of flowering plants and use a magnifying glass to study their unique characteristics. Choose from two sessions: morning session (10 AM – 1 PM), afternoon session (2-5 PM). HSNY Hort Members $115, nonmembers $150.
    Register online/Get materials list
  • Prickly Subjects – Thursday, November 3, 2011. Have you always wanted to capture the complex details of plants? Do stick-me-outs leave you baffled? Learn how to capture the most intricate details of the plant world with Australian botanical artist, John Pastoriza-Piñol. Choose from two sessions: morning session (10 AM – 1 PM), afternoon session (2-5 PM). HSNY Hort Members $115, nonmembers $150.
    Register online/Get materials list
  • Grisaille Technique in Botanical Painting – Monday, November 21, 2011. Artist and author, Wendy Hollender, will teach students how to create three-dimensional botanical forms using the grisaille technique to create tonal values. She will then show students how to apply color over these tones to create finished colored pencil paintings of botanical subjects. Choose from two sessions: morning session (10 AM – 1 PM), afternoon session (2-5 PM). HSNY Hort Members $115, nonmembers $150. Register online/Get materials list

The American Society of Botanical Artists has a membership of over 1,100 from the United States and 25 other countries. Its mission is to promote public awareness of botanical art, honoring its traditions and furthering its development.

The Horticultural Society of New York provides programs that sustain the vital connection between people and plants, growing a community of New Yorkers that values horticulture and giving even those with limited resources the knowledge and opportunity to cultivate plants, benefiting the environment, their neighborhoods, and their own lives.

The catalog for this exhibition can be purchased at the show and can also be purchased at ArtPlantae Books.

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Don’t worry. You won’t get in trouble.

Personally, I write in the margins of many things. I write all over the research papers I read and in the books from my personal library too. Some books are so full of information (like Karin Nickelsen’s book about 18th-century botanical illustrations), notes are a necessity because they are the only way I can keep up with the author and relate new information to other things I’ve read. Writing in the margins is how I make meaning. What I do not do, is highlight and underline pages and pages of text. Highlighting and excessive underlining never worked for me. While studying teaching and learning techniques and student learning in grad school, I read a comment by someone making the point that the act of highlighting text is simply proclaiming, I’ll get to this later. Now isn’t that the truth? I apologize for not being able to give credit to this individual.

What about doodling? Do you create doodles to help you process information in the text?

Then you might be interested in an exhibition at the University of North Carolina exploring why images are paired with text and how information is conveyed through pictures. The exhibition, Meaningful Marks: Image and Text and the History of the Book, is on view at the Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room in the Wilson Special Collection Library until September 28, 2011. One of the books featured in the exhibit is Mark Catesby’s Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands (1731-1743).

Getting back to scribbling in book margins…

Do you find this practice offensive or are you okay with people who do this? Here is a link to a short video featuring interviews with people on both sides of this issue. This video was created by multimedia journalist, Jonathan Michaels, and takes a look at why we write in books.


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This post marks the beginning of a new feature about books and literature pertaining to plants, nature, natural history art and related topics.



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florum
Sevenoaks Wildlife Reserve
September 10-17, 2011

This weekend botanical artists will gather to celebrate plants, botanical art and the Sevenoaks Wildlife Reserve. The Florum organization and the Kent Wildlife Trust are excited to present their annual exhibition of botanical art. Proceeds benefit the Sevenoaks Wildlife Reserve, a 136-acre sanctuary composed of lakes, ponds and habitat that is home to birds, plants, fungi and wildlife. The Sevenoaks Wildlife Reserve is located near London.

Featured artists for 2011 are Kristin Rosenberg, Jan Harbon, Christina Hart-Davies, Wendy Cranston, Sue Scullard, Mayumi Hashi, Sue J. Williams, Monty Parkin, Karen Birchwood, Barbara Valentine, Elizabeth Small, and Pauline Grove. A total of 62 artists will participate in this year’s show.

This exhibition opens on Saturday and is free to the public.
Exhibition hours are 10 AM – 5 PM daily.

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After raising her children, textile designer, teacher and caterer, Helen Allen, enrolled in the diploma course taught by Anne-Marie Evans in 1996. In 2003, she began to assist Anne-Marie Evans on the diploma course and in 2005, succeeded Anne-Marie as Course Director. Today this 17-year old program is taught by Helen and four other teachers — a botanist from Kew, a botanical illustrator from Kew, and two painting tutors who are also botanical painters. Former students and graduates have earned medals from the Royal Horticultural Society, have artwork included in the Highgrove Florilegium, in Curtis’s Botanical Magazine, and are represented in many public and private collections.

While Helen was studying at the English Gardening School, she also worked as a medical researcher. It was during this time she learned that research has to be meticulous and rigorous and this has benefited her approach to botanical painting. During her teaching career, Helen was a an Advisory Teacher in London and was responsible for the teaching of textiles and related crafts in London’s primary schools.

Helen has always loved painting, plants and teaching and at the English Gardening School with Anne-Marie, these three things have come together in a neat package. Helen believes she has been incredibly privileged to have learned from the best and to have taught students who are amazingly talented.

Helen’s own work has been featured in the Highgrove Florilegium twice. Her paintings can also be found at The Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation, the Chelsea Physic Garden Archive, the Hampton Court Palace Florilegium Archive and the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Archive and Collection, as well as many private collections.

Please welcome our Feature Artist for September, Helen Allen!


ArtPlantae
: Helen, thank you so much for introducing me to your work. Teaching at the English Gardening School and at your own studio keeps keeps you very, very busy! I wanted to begin by asking about the successful program created by Anne-Marie. The program is comprised of three ten-week terms and several projects along the way. Many of us reading this interview have experienced the 5-day version of this 30-week program, having had the opportunity to learn from Anne-Marie herself. Did this program begin as a three-term program? How has it evolved over the years?

Helen Allen: Anne-Marie’s short courses are legendary and beautifully constructed and tailored to get the best results from participants. The short courses are not taught in the same way as our one-year diploma course nor should they be viewed as a shortened version. However, the short course format follows the same 5-step program following the drawing and painting of a chosen flower to it’s final conclusion. It is marvelous to see just how well students, with little or no experience, do in such a short space of time.The diploma program came after the initial short courses and grew out of those. The course began as a certificated program and then became a diploma program in 1996 or thereabouts. The course was designed along traditional methods of art teaching that require much practice. Techniques are learned through exercises that are then applied to plant material. The exercises are building blocks, if you like, and form the secure foundation on which to build towards adding the fine detail.

Over the years I have re-ordered these building blocks in a more logical way and updated materials and tasks. With my teachers, I review and amend program content every year and sometimes during the year if necessary. Student’s work and projects are also monitored on a regular basis; some is self- and group-critiqued and some reviewed by teachers.

Currently class notes and supporting material and images are available to our diploma students by email. We hope to use technology more in the classroom in the future.


AP
: What is your teaching philosophy?

HA: I love what I do and want to share this with others. I want my students to learn the excitement of LOOKING at plants and really SEEING, in detail, important diagnostic features. It is only then that the student KNOWS what to investigate, highlight and show in the finished piece of work. It is imperative to OBSERVE and RECORD meaningfully and accurately through careful DRAWING. A good drawing stands a good chance of becoming a good painting. A bad drawing has NO chance at all.

COMPOSITION is the setting for the PAINTING and where BOTANY and DRAWING meet on the page. PAINTING requires hours of PRACTICE and is the ultimate PRIZE.

These are the ingredients which, blended together with care, build CONFIDENCE and INDEPENDENCE.

Learning botanical painting is rather like learning how to make a souffle. There will be mistakes and loss of confidence along the way but if the souffle collapses we have to rescue it and in doing so we learn not to make the same mistake again. This is how we learn to be CONFIDENT.


AP
: A number of the program’s students have gone on to make significant contributions to botanical art by way of their participation in florilegia and the inclusion of their work in public collections. Why do you think this is so?

HA: It has become very fashionable for great gardens and collections of plants to be painted for posterity. It is another method of conservation, of preserving plants that may in time become extinct. Artists paint together, and with botanists, make the collections not just scientifically correct but aesthetically pleasing. What a wonderful way to paint. We have always taught in an historical context. This is important, not just to KNOW why we do it but to appreciate the discoveries and developments in science, art and materials over the centuries. It is useful also to know how travel, wars and social history influenced art and the teaching of art. We aim to make students aware of what has gone before and the debt we owe the great artists and botanical artists and illustrators, both historic and contemporary. If we can even begin to scratch the surface of what they did with anything like their dedication and finesse, then we leave a legacy too. I believe our graduates are inspired, have a sense of purpose and are ambitious, not necessarily for themselves, but to leave their legacy for others to see in the future.


AP
: The diploma course will begin its 18th year in January. Have you or the English Gardening School considered adding botanical art classes to the school’s schedule of distance learning courses?

HA: We already have a hugely successful and internationally renown Garden Design distance learning course, however I approach learning botanical painting, at a distance, with some skepticism. Technology is a wonderful aid but by the time the painted image has been photographed, saved to CD or hard drive and viewed by several people on as many monitors, the truth is lost. If printed, then we are seriously compromised. Learning in isolation is not helpful. In the classroom original work is seen by tutors and simply watching the way in which a student applies paint can prompt constructive criticism and help. Knowing the students, their approach to their work, their fears and woes, is helpful to their technical and self-development. There is always more than one way to teach and learn a single skill. We need to find the right way for each student and help them individually to attain goals. So many invaluable tips and asides are absorbed in the classroom as well as intelligent critique. I believe that many of these experiences are not available at a distance.


AP
: Many people people learn botanical art by picking up a one-day class here and a three-day class there. Often these learning opportunities are separated by several months. Embarking on a serious, structured, long-term study of botanical art is a dream for many and has its obvious benefits. However, even students in established programs can fall behind with their homework. Drawing upon your observations of how students learn botanical art, what is the most effective way students of botanical art can stay on track with their studies?

HA: Firstly, they must be serious in their endeavours and understand that perfection only comes through hard labour. Every stage of the course takes many hours of work. For example, drawing parallel lines would seem a childish pursuit to the uninitiated. However this is how stems are constructed and we all need to be able to observe the nature of the stem and to describe it in pencil, paint or ink with confidence. Whatever the technique, there is no quick-fix solution and they must KEEP UP with and finish the homework set each week.

When homework (assignments) are set, students are advised that they can go home and do the set work OR they can practice it over and over again and then do their homework. They also understand that some tasks take longer than others to perform to an acceptable standard, and individuals learn these techniques at different rates. They learn to critique constructively, ask relevant questions and have their own work critiqued by looking at each others work each week. It is surprising how much one learns this way. If work is not shown, it is impossible for student and teacher to have a meaningful dialogue.

Reading around the botany, visiting art galleries and museums and being aware of our surroundings all influence the way we work and are helpful in the development of our work and skills.


AP
: How should students new to botanical art think about paint? (Six colors or as many as your heart desires? Tubes or pans? Palette arrangement, etc.)

HA: AAH! Now here is a most controversial subject. There are as many colour theories as there are hues and all have their good points. It is always interesting to hear the views of other painters. As far as I am concerned, there is no right or wrong paintbox and I will never say NEVER to a student ALTHOUGH I may advise caution. I like both tubes and pans, tubes go further and are easier to mix with water and each other, they are also kinder to paint brushes. But I prefer pans when working on vellum and particularly my old W&N (Winsor & Newton) paints.

I advise a limited palette containing 2 yellows, blues and reds, a magenta, violet, indigo, pthalo green and burnt umber. Other hues are added later on where necessary. Students make paint charts for their boxes, do many paint mixing exercises and quickly become familiar with paints and their properties. These repetitive exercises help students practice and improve their painting skills, whilst providing them with a superb dictionary of colours.

I like the colour bias wheel and descriptions of hues as green blues, orange yellows, violet reds, etc. It is then easy to understand and actually see the relative proportions of primary colours in the botanical subject, to analyse the hues in the paint box and mix accordingly. This is a very simplistic explanation but works well for me.

We advise our students to start with a limited palette to which they add over the year and prefer students to use single pigment paints as when learning and mixing there is less chance of making mud every single time. They will then have a clearer idea of how these colours mix. With just six colours it is possible to make almost any but the very cleanest and brightest of colours. More importantly it is very much easier to mix each colour with the other 5 in turn to see the vast range of colours that are possible. All students begin with the same make and range of colours, rich pigments with sufficient filler to make them easy to mix and to use in washes, and the same white paper so that there is some standardization.

As with all things, the more one works with paints and practices the various techniques required, the more one is able to make choices based on experience. Arranging the paintbox is a personal choice. I arrange mine in RAINBOW order but starting with a green yellow, through reds to violets and onto blues. All other colours come after (this). I now have a red through violets and purples box, a green box, a larger box for yellows and blues, and a box of earths, greys, white and any other stray colours. I also have paint boxes that are restricted to paints made by single manufacturers.

One could pontificate forever. As with technique, one manufacturer of paint or theory does not suit everybody.


AP
: Are there noticeable stylistic differences between the botanical art produced in Europe, Asia, Australia and the US? If so, how does the botanical art differ by region?

HA: I think there are. Styles are influenced by culture, education and training. Very often it is the botanical material and placement on the page that gives the game away. I envy the technical ability of many of the Japanese artists, the drawing skills of the Australians and the colour work of the South Africans. American botanical painting is a fusion of many styles in a variety of media and therefore more enigmatic. With huge climatic variation and geographical differences, plant life is also hugely varied. European style is very traditional in it’s approach, but overall remains more true to the traditions and rules of yesteryear whilst continually pushing the boundaries.

I think we are all in danger of missing the point of botanical art, whether it be illustration or painting and maybe even confusing the boundaries between botanical art and the more decorative art of flower painting. It doesn’t matter how good we are in manipulating the tools of our trade or how deep our knowledge of colour theory if we lose sight of why we do it. As botanical painters, what we all need to work towards is the faithful rendition of plants in a three dimensional way whilst capturing the beauty and drama of the subject with subtlety and finesse.

To be more specific will take too long.


AP
: Does technology have a place in the creation of botanical art or should this classic art form remain untouched by technology?

HA: I have touched on my concerns about technology in an earlier section. I greatly admire Niki Simpson’s work and am very interested in where it will lead. I believe we need to be receptive to change in materials and technology and see where it leads us, but without losing sight of why we paint botanical. But I think also that a sound classical art training develops hand-eye coordination, develops the mind and the achievement of particular manipulative skills in a way that simply using technology to achieve something similar cannot. However, I do not wish to undermine or denigrate the work of those with technological skills which I neither have nor understand!

I shall be in Boston and look forward to seeing old friends and making new.



Ask The Artist with Helen Allen

Helen welcomes your questions about her work and botanical art. Please post your question(s) below in the comment box. Helen will respond when she is able. Thank you.



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Elizabeth Blackadder, Iris oncocyclus (Courtesy National Galleries of Scotland)

ELIZABETH BLACKADDER

Scottish National Gallery
The Mound, Edinburgh

www.nationalgalleries.org
July 2, 2011 – Jan 2, 2012

Sponsored by Baillie Gifford

The artwork of one of Scotland’s most accomplished living artists, Dame Elizabeth Blackadder, is on view at the National Galleries of Scotland in Edinburgh. The exhibition celebrates Blackadder’s 60-year career and her 80th birthday.

Since launching her career in 1959, Elizabeth Blackadder has become known for her paintings, prints and drawings. She was the first woman artist to be elected to both the Royal Academy and Royal Scottish Academy and in 2001 she was honored with the title Her Majesty the Queen’s Painter and Limner in Scotland, a role that began with Sir Henry Raeburn almost 200 years ago. Blackadder studied at Edinburgh University and Edinburgh College of Art.

Included in the exhibition are Blackadder’s early drawings of the Italian landscape and its architecture. Her Pop Art-inspired work fills the central room of the exhibition, while her well-known drawings, paintings and prints about nature are celebrated in an adjacent room. Blackadder’s studies of nature illustrate her desire to capture the world around her, with no subject being too small or insignificant.

Blackadder traveled extensively throughout her career. In the 1980s, her visits to Japan made an impression on her and resulted in her embracing new techniques and imagery. A room dedicated to her exploration of the country’s unique customs, objects and design is included in this exhibit. On view are Japanese-inspired prints created by combining materials such as gold leaf with more conventional printing methods.

The exhibition concludes with recent and new paintings, drawings and prints.

John Leighton, Director-General of the National Galleries of Scotland said: 

Elizabeth Blackadder is, quite simply, one of Scotland’s greatest painters. She has revitalized long-established traditions of landscape, still life and flower painting in this country; she could be described as one of our finest painters in watercolor or equally lauded for her work as a printmaker. At once profoundly Scottish and enticingly exotic, her art is both familiar and mysterious. This major exhibition is both a celebration of her work and an invitation to look again at the achievement of an artist who could be described as a “national treasure”.


A Look at the Artwork of Elizabeth Blackadder

Courtesy of the National Galleries of Scotland

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