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Cover, Today's Botanical ArtistsWhile several books have been published about contemporary botanical art, both how-to books and books about international collections, there has never been a book highlighting the work of North American artists until the publication of Today’s Botanical Artists earlier this year. Written by Cora B. Marcus and Libby Kyer, this book features 220 pieces of artwork by 65 contributing artists.

This book is about more than the traditional presentation of plant portraits. Contributing artists have demonstrated that plant portraits do not have to be comprised of plants suspended in the middle of the page on a white background. They have demonstrated that it is possible to uphold tradition and provide viewers with information about a plant through the use of digital imagery, colored backgrounds, creative borders, macro-photo flower portraits, and photorealism techniques. This is a refreshing and welcome approach to botanical art.

The drawings and paintings featured in this book reflect the diverse interests and creative energy of each artist. Carolyn Crawford is drawn to plant life cycles, while Lara Call Gastinger is drawn to detritus. Dr. Dick Rauh is attracted to the structure of “the wisps and traces flowers leave behind”, while Jessica Tcherepnine is attracted to the strong defining structures of a plant that enable its survival. Robin Jess, Kaye Hurtt, Derek Norman, Linda Petchnick, George Olson, Margaret Saul, Geraldine King Tam, Carol Woodin, Bruce Lyndon Cunningham, and Lee McCaffree choose to document and describe plants from specific geographic regions that are of special interest or have been protected by state and federal agencies. Mindy Lighthipe’s and Peg (Margaret) Steunenberg’s inclusion of both flora and fauna in their artwork is reminiscent of natural history paintings by Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717).

The media and grounds employed by contributing artists are as varied as their interests. In this book, botanical art enthusiasts will discover plant portraits created in the following media: watercolor, watercolor pencil, colored pencil, watercolor & colored pencil, pastel, pastel pencil, pen-&-ink, ink wash, ink & watercolor, hand-colored etching, scratchboard, digital collage, digital painting, graphite, graphite & watercolor, graphite & gouache, gouache, acrylic, acrylic & colored pencil, egg tempera, oil, and mixed media. Paper was not the exclusive ground used for the drawings and paintings in this collection. Jean Emmons, Kate Nessler, and Carol Woodin provide beautiful examples of watercolor paintings on calfskin vellum, while Martha Kemp demonstrates the awe-inspiring way that fine pencil work can be created on this traditional surface.

There are so many styles and techniques to admire in this book that it is impossible to share them with you here. If you have an interest in botanical art and illustration, then set aside some time to experience how this award-winning group of North American artists have captured their respect for plants and nature in their artwork.

Order Today’s Botanical Artists (2007)


Related

Today’s Botanical Artists Answer Your Questions

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Updated 5/27/08

We are pleased to announce that twenty-five contributors to Today’s Botanical Artists will participate in the Ask the Artist Q&A on June 24, 2008. The artists who will be answering your questions are:

Bobbi Angell
Margaret Best
Olivia Marie Braida Chiusano
Bruce Lyndon Cunningham
Beverly Duncan
Jean Emmons
Carol E. Hamilton

Wendy Hollender
Kathy J. Imel
Sally Jacobs
Robin Jess
Mindy Lighthipe
Michael Maskarinec
Julie Sims Messenger
Sherry Mitchell
Rose Pellicano
Linda Petchnick
Rayma Kempinsky Peterson
Dick Rauh
Scott Rawlins
Janet Rieck
Susan Rubin
Dolores R. Santoliquido
Louise Smith
Wendy Smith

Do you have questions about artwork you’ve viewed in Today’s Botanical Artists?

Do you have any questions about botanical art and illustration?

Now is the time to ask!

Submit your questions now thru June 13, 2008 to AskTheArtist@artplantae.com

Questions will be distributed among artists on the panel.

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The J. Paul Getty Museum will host the exhibit, Maria Sibylla Merian & Daughters: Women of Art & Science, June 10 – August 31, 2008. Several exhibit-related activities are planned, including a demonstration and Point-of-View talk by Australian botanical artist, Jenny Phillips, and various activities that will be led by members of the Botanical Artists Guild of Southern California.

Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717) dedicated her life to the study and depiction of the metamorphosis of insects. Merian’s extraordinary accomplishments in art and science and those of her most important pupils – her daughters Johanna Helena and Dorothea Maria – will be on view in the first major exhibiton of Merian’s work in America.

The exhibition will explore various aspects of Merian’s career, including her hand-colored publications on flowers and insects, her successful business venture in Amsterdam as a specimen-supplier for collectors and naturalists, and her extraordinary journey to Suriname and the scientific discoveries that resulted. Specimens of actual insects, including the large Blue Morpho butterfly, will be included in the exhibition alongside Merian’s rendering – providing a rare opportunity for scholars, nature lovers, and families to experience European and exotic insects first hand.

For more information, download the press release here.

For a complete listing of exhibit-related events, download a copy of the schedule here.

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ArtPlantae Books is excited to announce that the book event for May/June will feature the new book, Today’s Botanical Artists. Beginning next week, you can drop in to learn more about this new book, its authors Cora B. Marcus and Libby Kyer, and the 65 North American artists who contributed to this publication. Please make note of the following dates on your calendar:

  • Tuesday, May 20th – Book event for May/June is announced
  • Tuesday, May 27th – Book Review posted on ArtPlantae Today
  • Tuesday, June 3rd – An Interview with co-author, Libby Kyer
  • Tuesday, June 10th – An Interview with contributor, Gilly Shaeffer
  • Friday, June 13th – Last day for readers to submit “Ask the Artist” questions
  • Tuesday, June 17th – “Ask the Artist” reminder
  • Tuesday, June 24th – “Ask the Artist” Q&A is posted on ArtPlantae Today

Several of the contributors to this beautiful collection of contemporary botanical art will be participating in the “Ask the Artist” session. Check back next week to learn more!

Today’s Botanical Artist is available at ArtPlantae Books for $39.95, plus S&H.

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The Los Angeles International Fern Society, Inc. has invited ArtPlantae Books to participate in the 40th Annual Fern and Exotic Plant Show and Sale, June 14 – 15, 2008 at the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden. Show hours are 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on both days. Come out to the show to learn more about ferns, their care, and the botanists and enthusiasts who study them.

Directions to the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden can be viewed here.

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See the latest in landscape design and shop for your home and garden at the 2008 LA Garden Show (May 2 – 4) at the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanical Garden in Arcadia, CA. ArtPlantae Books will be in the Marketplace and will be selling many titles pertaining to botanical art, botanical illustration, drawing, economic botany, general botany, plant identification, and insect identification. Journals, sketchbooks, art supplies, studios supplies and field supplies, such as the wonderfully practical Joey Jam Pack, will also be available.

While in the Marketplace, be sure to enjoy the drawings and paintings of the Botanical Artists Guild of Southern California. Paintings, prints, and cards will be available for purchase.

Come early and bring your wagon!

Dates & Hours: May 2 – 4, 2008; 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. daily
Directions: LA Arboretum & Botanical Garden

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It is clear that Botanical Drawing: A Beginner’s Guide has inspired you to draw plants. Wendy is very appreciative of your interest in her new book and thinks the questions you submitted last week are excellent! Wendy’s responses to your comments and questions follows:

Thanks for taking the time to answer questions! I have just begun the workbook, but love it so far.
I am glad to hear that you are actually using the workbook and enjoying the process! This is what it is all about. Practice and enjoyment will certainly lead to good results.

In general, for the deep shadows on the green leaves, do you use various shades of gray pencil or do you use the complementary color — a shade of red?
I usually work first with an underlayer of a dark sepia pencil which is the equivalent of a graphite pencil shade. It is a brownish, grayish color that can go from very dark to very light. I do my drawing and toning first with this to about 20 percent coverage, then I start to feed-in green tones, which blend together. I add lighter tones and more yellowish greens in my light areas as well. I use the complement when I want to dull a color. If my green feels too bright, I will layer in some red or orange.

When you are drawing/painting white flowers (letting the white paper be the basis for the white flower) are you using just grays for the shadows/modeling on the petals/sepals or are you using other “cool” colors?
I model white petals with either tones of cool gray or sometimes-even warmer grays. It is important to still have very dark areas to define the structure, but then the transition to lighter tones happens quicker on white flowers. Sometimes there might be a hint of lavender in the grays. The most important element is always defining the structure of the flower and the light source using the right range of tones.

When I have photographed my colored pencil drawings, the white background tends to come out a shade of gray in the digital print. How can I correct this without resorting to trying to correct it with Photoshop?
I prefer to scan my original artwork rather than photograph the work. The resolution is much better and so are the colors. That said, even with this method, white backgrounds can be a problem. Sometimes using the magic wand tool in Photoshop can easily remove the background, but often it is necessary to select the entire background for the purpose of changing the tone with several different techniques. The sharper your edges are, the easier the process of separating out the background, but it still has to be done in Photoshop. Otherwise, you will be adjusting all the colors in your artwork which you may not want to do. One idea is to try and adjust contrast on the whole drawing. Unfortunately, I have not found a technique that doesn’t require some work. Changing and removing backgrounds is not too difficult once you find a technique that works well for your work.

Do you sketch at botanic gardens much or do you usually have a plant in front of you at your studio/home to work from?
I often work on location at botanic gardens, in the rain forest, other tropical locations, and at local parks in my neighborhood. My favorite method is to have a table and chair set up somewhere close to where the plant is growing so I can work comfortably. I take a cutting to study closely, is possible, but I will refer back to the plant as it grows for more information on how it looks naturally. I do bring plants back to work in my studio, but if I can capture the plant in it’s natural setting before it is wilted or dramatically changed, I prefer that method.

How much of your work (estimated) is done in colored pencil?
When I first started doing botanical work I used colored pencil primarily for note taking and for quick samples of the colors in the specimen. As I developed my technique more and more, I started using colored pencil in finished drawings and paintings. Now I would estimate that 80 – 90 % of my work is in colored pencil. I sometimes use watercolor as undertones and for backgrounds, but do all my detail in colored pencil.

Do you get commissioned to draw botanical subjects?
I do get commissions for botanical subjects from a variety of individuals
and for commercial purposes as well. I have been commissioned to illustrate plants growing in a particular garden or park, as well as illustrations for use on botanical labels or for magazines and other publications. Commissions also come in the form of, “Can you draw a daisy for my mother’s birthday, it is her favorite flower?” I also take my finished drawings and design silk scarves from them. I have them digitally printed on silk. The results are very close to the original drawings.

How do you paint two very dark flowers, for example, one behind the other and distinguish between the two of them?
Even when rendering a dark flower there still needs to be a range of tones from very dark to very light. I will often make the flower that is in front lighter on the edge that is closest to the flower behind for contrast. I will also make the flower behind darker, as it is most likely in shadow. Bright highlights will be reserved for the flower in front.

The edges of my flowers tend to be messy. I can’t get clean lines. How do you achieve your clean edges?
I achieve clean edges towards the end of a drawing by switching to the Verithin pencils by Prismacolor. They are a harder pencil and can fill in the rough edges quite nicely. I also sharpen all my pencils often so I can get clean sharp edges, but it is important not to outline! Outlines tend to flatten form, whereas a dark edge turning lighter as it describes the form heading towards the light will look 3-dimensional.

I don’t know where to start when the plant (or flower) I am drawing has lots of leaves or petals. After a while I seem to lose track of where I am at. What is the best way to draw them?
I like to draw the simple shape of the flower or plant first, defining a center axis where the petals and leaves will radiate from. I will also “prune” a plant while planning a composition, eliminating some leaves that I don’t feel contribute to the drawing. On a complex flower, I draw the center vein of each petal first, then attach it to the form, and build up my flower this way. It is more important to draw the petals radiating correctly from the stem, than to copy each petal exactly as it is on your particular flower. I tell my students, “This is not a crime scene.” It is more important to show an overall understanding of a plant’s structure than to describe each and every petal exactly as it is on that one particular flower. A trick is to study the edges of the petals closely so you can draw them accurately, but you don’t have to study every petal to do this!

What is your approach to keeping your work looking “fresh” and “bright”?
Good contrast in lights and darks helps to make a drawing look bright and in focus. A clear light source is important as well. It is always about tone and form first for me, and color second, even though in the end it is the color that we notice. I try to match my colors exactly from nature for the local color of the specimen, but then I do whatever I need to in the shadow areas and highlighted areas to describe the 3-dimensional quality of the form.

How do you achieve true values in watercolor, rather than a pastel-y watered down look?
To achieve true values and good contrast in watercolor it is necessary to work in layers and use enough dry brush and opaque paint towards the end for sufficient contrast.

Have you tried using your book with children?
The lessons in my workbook were developed over several years of working with many groups of students. I have worked with students of all ages including young children. This past fall I did some classes with third and fourth graders in a Brooklyn Public school. I was describing light source on crab apples and demonstrating my technique to the group. When I described the light source and the highlighted area a little boy shouted out, “Oh, that is where the sun is hitting the apple.” It was clear that he understood exactly what I was trying to demonstrate. My technique for teaching is the same, regardless of the age or ability of the student. I try to teach step-by-step lessons that build on skills one at a time, from a simple concept to a more complex one, allowing students to work at their own pace and moving on only after they understand the basic concept.

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ArtPlantae Books would like to thank Wendy for taking the time to chat with us and for signing copies of her new workbook. Special thanks go out to you, our readers, whose participation in this event has created a learning environment from which many can benefit.

Visit Wendy Hollender’s website at DrawingInColor.com. Wendy’s paintings can also be viewed in the recently published book, Today’s Botanical Artists by Cora Marcus and Libby Kyer.



UPDATE 2015
:
Wendy’s second book, Botanical Drawing in Color: A Basic Guide to Mastering Realistic Form and Naturalistic Color can be purchased online.

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