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Archive for the ‘Special Events’ Category

Now at Classes Near You > Italy:

Gretchen Kai Halpert
www.gretchenhalpert.com
Gretchen Halpert is a scientific illustrator and biologist with many years of experience creating illustrations for the medical field, for scientific research, and for commercial clients. Gretchen also teaches classes in the book arts and leads journaling classes.

    Nature and Travel Journaling in Tuscany
    Tenuta di Spannocchia, Siena, Italy
    June, 16-25, 2011
    In this workshop, participants will make a sketchbook and immerse themselves in plants, nature and travel. Beginning with an optional class about how to make their own sketchbook, participants will spend the week filling those books with drawings inspired by the Tuscan countryside, ancient architecture and cultivated gardens. Pen and ink, watercolor, composition, text, observation exercises, individual attention. All takes place on one of the first privately owned wildlife sanctuaries in Italy. Wildlife, trails, an abandoned castle and gardens offer plenty of material. This workshop is open to all skill levels.

    For more information on the course, accommodations, field trips, and photos, go to http://natureandtraveljournalingintuscany.blogspot.com. Course information is in August post. Registration is open, limited to 12 students.

    Contact: Gretchen Halpert for registration forms.

    Fee: $2250/pp/double; $2950/pp/single. Includes 9 nights lodging in 14th-century villa, most meals, wine, and field trips, daily classes and evening presentations. Afternoon wine on the terrace.

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© Eva Maria Ruhl. All rights reserved

Eva Maria Ruhl’s painting of a baby fig has been selected as the promotional image for the current competition at Light, Space & Time, an online art gallery that hosts monthly themed exhibitions.

Light, Space & Time was created by photographer John R. Math to provide an online venue for artists to showcase their work. Each themed exhibition begins with a call for artists and is followed by a one month exhibition of the top five entries. The current theme is Botanicals. This competition is open to all artists, both amateur and professional. Only two-dimensional art is accepted. All entries are due by March 29, 2011. The work of selected artists will be featured at Light, Space & Tim
from April 1 – April 30, 2011.

Visit the Light, Space & Time website to learn how to submit work for the Botanicals exhibition and to read the official rules governing the gallery’s events. Please direct all questions to John R. Math.

Thank you to Eva for providing this information so other interested artists may participate.


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© Margaret Best. All rights reserved

Bermuda Botanica
May 20 – June 7, 2011

Award-winning artist, Margaret Best will have a solo exhibition this Spring at the Bermuda Society of Art. Bermuda Botanica will feature Margaret’s paintings of Bermuda’s tropical flora. Following the opening of her exhibition, Margaret will teach a masterclass about color and composition. See below for more information.


Margaret Best
Best Botanical

www.bestbotanical.com
Margaret Best is an award-winning artist and respected teacher. Her artwork has been shown in many exhibitions about contemporary botanical art and is featured in the book, Today’s Botanical Artists, by Cora Marcus and Libby Kyer. Margaret teaches in Canada, England, Bermuda, and the U.S. Her work is held in both public and private collections, including The Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, PA.

    Bermuda
    Bermuda Society of Arts, Hamilton
    www.bsoa.bm
    Known as The People’s Art Gallery, the Bermuda Society of Arts is comprised of four galleries and hosts approximately 50 shows per year.
    Drawing with Dimension: Graphite Techniques to Achieve Effective Continuous Tone – March 5-6, 2011; 10 AM – 4 PM. Develop your drawing skills and learn how to assess nature’s forms. Participants will learn graphite techniques that will enable them to create 3-dimensional forms on paper. Artists at all levels welcome.
    Finding Form in Watercolor – March 9-11, 2011; 10 AM – 4 PM. Develop an understanding of how to create a full range of colors in your botanical paintings. Participants will complete exercises that will lead them to achieve color intensity and then value to create form. Artists at all levels welcome.
    Color & Composition: A Masterclass with Margaret Best – May 30-June 2, 2011; 10 AM – 4 PM. A four-day workshop observing, composing, and drawing local subtropical flora. Learn how to compose your subject using its color to your advantage.

Located off the eastern coast of the United States, Bermuda is only a two-hour flight from North Carolina and New York.

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Cover of Robert Tyas’ The Language of Flowers, or Floral Emblems or Thoughts, Feelings and Sentiments (London, George Routledge and Sons, 1869), HI Library call no. DG21 T977L.

Courtesy of The Hunt Institute

FLORA’S LEXICON
25 March–30 June 2011

Flora’s Lexicon explores the 19th-century European and American phenomenon of The Language of Flowers, the common understanding that plants and blooms were charged with sentiment and meaning and held the potential to express emotion or to communicate privileged messages within the strict confines of social etiquette. Flower associations made their way into Victorian language from various sources, including Japanese, Middle Eastern, Turkish, Greek and Roman cultures, religions and mythology, as well as the literature of Shakespeare and the still-life painting of 17th-century Dutch artists. The result was a fashionable system of floral connotations that blossomed during a time of burgeoning public interest in botany and its scientific importance.

So pervasive and popular was The Language of Flowers trend that it launched the introduction of the floral dictionary or Language of Flowers book, a small, beautifully bound and illustrated volume devoted to the decoding of each flower’s secret meaning. This sentimental craze and the books associated with it originated in France, the most notable being Le Langage des Fleures of 1819 by Charlotte de Latour. This volume was reprinted in multiple editions, translated into English and imitated by other French, British and American authors until the trend waned in the mid-1880s, shortly after English author and illustrator Kate Greenaway (1846–1901) published her charmingly illustrated floral dictionary, The Language of Flowers (1884).

The Language of Flowers book phenomenon also attracted the skills of numerous

To beauty, friendship and love (rose, ivy and myrtle), hand-colored engraving published by Saunders and Otley, Conduit Street, from Anna Christian Burke’s The Illustrated Language of Flowers (London, G. Routledge and Co., 1856), HI Library call no. DG21 B959I.

respected botanical artists of the era, including Pierre-Joseph Redouté (1759–1840), Pancrace Bessa (1772–1846), Pierre-Jean-François Turpin (1775–1840) and Pierre-Antoine Poiteau (1766–1854). Although their illustrations for this genre differed slightly in scale and scientific detail from their major works, they were prized for their beauty and added to the appeal of these intricately bound and decorated volumes while serving to familiarize a large segment of the population with the artists’ talent.

Flora’s Lexicon presents books from the Hunt Institute’s Library and botanical portraits from the Art Department in an examination of the scope of The Language of Flowers phenomenon, from the influences on its beginning to its continued presence in 21st-century publishing. Differing approaches to the floral dictionary are displayed, while intricate systems of meaning are explored through artworks of many key 18th- and 19th-century botanical artists and illustrators.


Location & Hours

The exhibition will be on display on the 5th floor of the Hunt Library building at Carnegie Mellon University and will be open to the public free of charge. Hours: Monday–Friday, 9 a.m.–noon and 1–5 p.m.; Sunday, 1–4 p.m. (except 22–24 April; 15 and 29–30 May). Hours subject to change, please call or email before your visit to confirm viewing hours. For further information, contact the Hunt Institute at 412-268-2434.


Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation

5th Floor, Hunt Library
Carnegie Mellon University
4909 Frew Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
Telephone: 412-268-2434
Email: huntinst@andrew.cmu.edu
Website: http://huntbot.andrew.cmu.edu
Directions: View map

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New at Classes Near You > Texas and Classes Near You > Guatemala:


Cynthia Padilla, Dallas

http://fruitflowerinsect.blogspot.com
Cynthia Padilla teaches painting and drawing classes at prestigious universities, major museums, arboreta, art societies across the US, Canada, Central America and internationally. She curates exhibitions, serves as a juror of exhibitions, lectures and conducts demonstrations, and leads painting retreats worldwide.

    Botanical Arts/ Nature Sketching the Tropical Flora and Fauna of Guatemala with Cynthia Padilla – March 31 – April 9, 2011. Central America, Guatamala – Antiqua. Join popular instructor Cynthia Padilla for a week submerged in the beauty of the tropical flora and fauna of Guatemala. Spend unhurried time, workingmen en plein air, lulled by the gentle breezes of “the land of eternal spring.” Days begin with an introduction to materials and demonstration of technique. Participants are welcome to document whatever catches their eye and imagination….ancient structures, tropical landscapes, colorful markets.

    Class will be based in lovely Antigua, a delightful bougainvillea-draped town with an international ambiance of internet cafes, art galleries, artisan crafts and warmhearted, welcoming people.

    Participants will also head into the highlands where volcanoes rise out of early morning mist and spend 3 days on Lake Atitlan.

    Begin a lifelong habit of journaling in nature and return home with a collection of sketches, tiny vignettes, notes & notations, measurements and musings, and frameable works of art in breathtaking detail. All media and all levels welcome.

    Registration/Information: Liza Fourré, Director, Art Workshops in Guatemala, call 612-825-0747 or contact Liza Fourré, Director.

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Click for a behind-the-scenes look!

A Brush with Nature
Jan. 8 – Feb. 17, 2011
Chapman University Leatherby Libraries
An exhibit of botanical art by The Botanical Artists Guild of Southern California
Exhibit Hours
Parking

Twenty-two members of the Botanical Artists Guild of Southern California (BAGSC) are currently exhibiting their work at Chapman University Leatherby Libraries in Orange, CA.

Exhibiting artists are: Bonnie Born Ash, Cristina Baltayian, Margaret Best, Diane Daly, Akiko Enokido, Olga Eysymontt, Denise Genova, Irene Horiuchi, Barbara Jaynes, Clara Josephs, Morgan Kari, Joan Keesey, Suzanne Kuuskmae, Arillyn Moran-Lawrence, Norma Sarkin, Janice Sharp, Deborah Shaw, Mitsuko Schultz, Gilly Shaeffer, Gloria Whea-Fun Teng, and Leslie Walker.

Reception and Artist Presentations
Thursday, February 10, 2011 (7 PM – 9 PM)
Reception RSVP Required: brushwithnature@me.com by February 5. For more information please call 714-532-7742.

Exhibit Location:
Doy and Dee Henley Reading Room and Clarke Gallery Wall
Leatherby Libraries, 2nd Floor
Chapman University
One University Drive, Orange, California 92866

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This weekend, four exhibitions will open at the Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art at Kew Gardens. Kew artists and members of the Leicestershire Society of Botanical Illustration and the Hampton Court Palace Florilegium will exhibit botanical illustrations and paintings February 5 – June 1, 2011. Gallery visitors will be able to view contemporary botanical art, art from the 18th century, and illustrations created by Kew’s artists to aid in plant identification. For the first time, artwork will be available for sale. A portion of each sale will support the garden and the gallery.

Read about these exciting exhibits at What’s On At Kew Gardens.


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Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art
Hampton Court Palace Florilegium

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