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A brain isn’t just left-sided or right-sided. It is a single working unit that makes it possible to understand the interdisciplinary nature of knowledge.

This view is expressed by Edmond Alkaslassy and Terry O’Day in Linking Art and Science with a Drawing Class, published in Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, the refereed quarterly publication of the Association of College and University Educators.

Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002) wanted to help students recognize the shared skills required in art and science, so they designed a drawing course for second-semester freshmen enrolled in an introductory biology class. This drawing course was taught in conjunction with the biology lecture/lab class. The researchers wanted to use the drawing course as a tool to reinforce the message that good observational skills are beneficial in both an artistic and scientific setting (Alkaslassy and O’Day, 2002).

Unlike other experiments in which drawing activities are incorporated into a lab class, Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002) were careful to keep the drawing class free of heavy biological content. They wanted the drawing class to be a course where students could improve their drawing ability. That’s it.

To preserve this format, they made sure drawing exercises did not resemble biology homework for fear the drawing course would become a “help session” (Alkaslassy and O’Day, 2002) for the biology class. Students were not even required to label drawings of subjects they had not yet learned about in the lecture class. Adding labels to drawings was viewed as being “tantamount to asking (students) to study and learn biology” (Alkaslassy and O’Day, 2002). The authors wanted to see if improved drawing ability had an effect on student observational skills and, therefore, an effect on academic performance in the lecture class.


The Results


Did learning how to observe in a drawing course improve academic performance in the biology class?

No. During the semester, all students enrolled in Biology 202 were required to complete five exams and twelve labs. At the end of the term, the mean scores of students enrolled in both the drawing class and the lecture/lab class were lower than the mean scores of the other students.

Why?

Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002) propose some reasons why this may have been the case:

  • The students who enrolled in the drawing course were academically weaker than students who did not enroll in the drawing course. College GPAs and SAT scores between the two groups were compared. The historical indicator of student success in the Biology 202 course (verbal SAT scores) were lower for students enrolled in the art course and the lecture/lab course.
  • The self-selected students enrolled in the drawing course because they were already concerned about their performance in Biology 202 and wanted the extra “tutorial”, which of course they did not receive because the drawing course was not designed to be a “help session”.
  • The drawing course created a false sense of understanding caused by the repeated observation of biological subjects.


Did the drawing course improve student drawing ability?

Yes. Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002) state this outcome can be observed in the pre-instructional and post-instructional drawings of trees completed by students. One example of a pre- and post- drawing is included in Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002). Students’ own comments about their improved drawing skills reinforce this finding.


Did students recognize observation as a shared skill worth developing in art and science?

Yes. Student comments about the relationship between drawing and biology suggest they were beginning to recognize the interdisciplinary nature of learning. Here is an example of one student’s comment in Alkaslassy and O’Day (2002):

I have realized, during my labs, how much more attention I pay to what I am trying to draw. Before I took this drawing class, I would’ve drawn a worm like a long skinny line and not given it its true justice of what it is really composed of.

The paper by Alkaslassy and O’Day is available online for free. See the Literature Cited section below.


Literature Cited

Alkaslassy, Edmond and Terry O’Day. 2002. Linking art and science with a drawing class. Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching 28(2): 7-14. Web.
25 April 2011. <http://acube.org/bioscene/>

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Artistolochia sp., CSU Fullerton Arboretum

How do you teach the value of a botanical garden?

Ecologist and educator, Dr. Bruce Rinker, answers this question in response to those who think botanical gardens are simply parks where play is not allowed (Rinker, 2002). In his article, The Weight of a Petal: The Value of Botanical Gardens, Rinker makes a case for the value of botanical gardens by tracing the close association between gardens and humans.

Since the first medicinal gardens were developed in Europe in the 1500s, gardens have served as trophies of colonial expansion, centers for taxonomic research, horticultural collections, resource centers dedicated to the study of specific groups of plants, and safe havens for threatened species (Rinker, 2002).

To help teachers demonstrate the value of botanical gardens in their classrooms, Rinker (2002) provides three pages of resources teachers can access easily on the Web, in books, and in journals. He also provides a link to a lesson created specifically for his article. The lesson, The Value of a Garden, was created by Dr. Marianne E. Krasny, Paul Newton, and Linda Tompkins, all from Cornell University. The activities they designed require students to think about gardens and the benefits they offer. The activities in this lesson plan can require up to three class periods and two weeks to complete, keeping students engaged and thinking about botanical gardens in several ways.

A valuable resource for classroom teachers and informal science educators, Rinker’s article, accompanying lesson plan, and the PowerPoint presentation by Krasny et al., are available online for free at:
http://www.actionbioscience.org/biodiversity/rinker2.html


Literature Cited

Rinker, Bruce H. 2002. The Weight of a Petal: The Value of Botanical Gardens. ActionBioscience.org. Web. 21 April 2011.
<http://www.actionbioscience.org/biodiversity/rinker2.html>



It’s a Small World

    Did you know…..botanists Philibert Commerson and Jeanne Baret worked with the botanists at Pamplemousse? Learn more about the early history of Pamplemousse, Pierre Poivre, and the Bougainville expedition here.

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Students think plants are boring. To challenge this viewpoint, we need to find a way to generate student interest in plants. But how?

We can begin by contemplating the findings of Niels Bonderup Dohn at the University of Aarhus in Copenhagen, Denmark. In Situational Interest of High School Students Who Visit an Aquarium, he investigated the factors triggering situational interest during a field trip to a local aquarium. He created a systematic approach of documenting interest because evaluations of visitor interest in a museum setting is usually anecdotal. As Dohn (2011) points out, teachers and docents may have a sense about how they can get their audience interested in a subject, but there aren’t data supporting the accuracy of their hunches and observations. Because the specific factors generating interest in museum settings have not been well documented, he set out to observe high school students as they learned about local marine life during a class field trip. Dohn (2011) asked a simple research question: How is the situational interest of students triggered during a field trip to an aquarium?

To find out which elements of the museum experience generated student interest in the ocean, Dohn (2011) did more than just follow sixteen 12th-grade students around the aquarium. His research began in the classroom eight weeks before students visited the aquarium. He observed, interviewed, and videotaped students for ten weeks. He collected data in three phases. In Phase 1, he observed the lectures students received in preparation for their visit to the aquarium. The second phase of data collection occurred during the field trip to the aquarium. Data collected in Phase 3, occurred in the classroom and consisted of follow-up interviews with students and their teacher.

Dohn (2011) collected data by conducting informal conversational interviews with students, videotaping students in the classroom and at the aquarium, conducting formal interviews with students, interviewing the classroom teacher, and by reading student reports about their ten-week experience learning about ecology, population biology, and the ecology of the Kerteminde fjord.

To analyze the wealth of qualitative data he collected, Dohn (2011) conducted a chronological review the the data and then applied codes to the transcripts of his conversations with students to help him identify the factors, as stated by the students themselves, generating situational interest during their visit to the aquarium.


Dohn’s Observations

The following “triggers” (Dohn, 2011) were identified as factors generating situational interest in students:

  1. Social Involvement – Being in a group, belonging to a community
  2. Hands-on Activities – Handling objects provided for concrete learning
  3. Surprise – Learning the unexpected, having flash moments of insight
  4. Novelty – Learning something new, participating in unique activities
  5. Knowledge Acquisition – Building upon prior knowledge

Early interviews with students indicate students thought the subject of ecology was “boring” and “abstract” (Dohn, 2011). Student opinions about ecology changed after visiting the aquarium. All students said ecology was more interesting to them after the class field trip and their positive feelings about ecology and the ocean lingered for at least a couple weeks after their aquarium visit. It is not know if these feelings lasted longer or motivated students to learn more about the ocean on their own. Dohn (2011) did not investigate student interest after Week 10.

Dohn (2011) states his findings may not be applicable in all situations and cites his small sample size and the unique snorkeling opportunities at the aquarium as some reasons. He acknowledges that students visiting an aquarium without a snorkeling option may have fewer positive things to say about their experience. Nonetheless, Dohn’s investigation into factors triggering interest in students offers insight useful to not only museum docents and staff, but to informal science educators and all of us who strive to share information with the public.

Dohn’s article can be purchased online from the journal Science Education for $35 or obtained by visiting your local college library.


How can botanical artists use this information to generate interest in plants?

You are invited to post your comments below.



Literature Cited

Niels Bonderup Dohn. 2011. Situational interest of high school students who visit an aquarium. Science Education 95(2): 337–357. Web. 4 April 2011. <http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/sce.20425/abstract>

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Plants are the most important, least understood, most taken for granted of all living things.

– Malcom Wilkens (1988) as cited in Babaian & Twigg (2011)

Biology professors Caryn Babaian and Paul Twigg describe how ethnobotanical topics and the arts can be used to encourage student interest in plants in The Power of Plants: Introducing Ethnobotany & Biophilia into Your Biology Class.

Babaian & Twigg (2011) state that topics in biology ranging from soil science, microbiology, seed biology, entomology, botany, and economic botany can be presented as relevant and timely issues using ethnobotany as a teaching platform.

Ethnobotany is the study of our cultural relationships with plants. The root word ethno– means “nation” (Borror, 1971).

The ethnobotany lessons and accompanying lab developed by the authors were created for a course whose main themes were ecology, culture, and our attraction toward living things (i.e., biophilia as described by biologist E.O. Wilson). Babaian & Twigg (2011) wanted to equip students with the ability to describe the concept of ethnobotany, articulate how plants are used in other cultures, become knowledgeable about local native plants, understand how humans are dependent upon plants for medicine, and experience how the arts can enhance student learning in biology.

To accomplish these objectives, Babaian & Twigg (2011) lead students through several activities.

Prior to studying whole plants, students studied the soil in which they grew. By studying the “rhizosphere” (Babaian & Twig, 2011), students learned about soil science.

Learning about the medicinal value of familiar foods such as onions and garlic, helped students gain appreciation for why medicinal plants must be protected.

A study of how plants are integral parts in the clothing, rituals, and beliefs of people in other cultures provided students a holistic approach to learning about plants.

Discussions about the symbiotic relationship between bacteria and plants served as the foundation for lessons in microbiology, and journaling enhanced the learning experience by serving as a record of what was learned and experienced.

Throughout the ethnobotany course, students kept an ethnobotanical journal in which they documented collection procedures, collected photographs, and illustrated their observations. Babaian & Twigg (2011) advocate the use of drawing as a learning tool because drawing allows students to “stay in the moment” and brings each “student to a more intimate level with the plant” (Babaian & Twigg, 2011). The authors have found this increases student awareness of plants and “increases biophilia” — student attraction towards other living things.

Sample pages of ethnobotanical journals and details about the authors’ lesson plans can be viewed in a free copy of this article now available on the website of The American Biology Teacher.


Literature Cited

Babaian, Caryn and Paul Twigg. 2011. The Power of Plants: Introducing Ethnobotany & Biophilia into Your Biology Class. The American Biology Teacher 70(4): 217-221. Web. 6 April 2011 <http://www.nabt.org/websites/institution/index.php?p=637#April_2011>

Borror, Donald J. 1971. Dictionary of Word Roots and Combining Forms. Mayfield Publishing Company. Palo Alto, CA.



Additional Resources You May Enjoy

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© 2011 by Margaret Best. All rights reserved

Margaret Best is an award-winning artist whose work is held in the permanent collection at the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation and in private collections around the globe. She holds a silver Grenfell medal from the RHS and her work has been shown in many ASBA juried exhibitions over the past decade. She is currently preparing for a solo show of drawings and paintings in Bermuda.

Margaret teaches graphite, color pencil and watercolor classes in Bermuda, Canada, the UK, and the US. She has developed a reputation for connecting with students, regardless of their skill level, and helping them generate their own forward movement.

Margaret is the Feature Artist for April and will also be a contributor to EE Week. Please join me in welcoming Margaret Best!


ARTPLANTAE: Margaret, you have established yourself as an authority on color. Your botanical painting classes are actually color studies. You teach classes about the colors green, red, purple, and blue. What made you decide to develop these color-specific classes?

MARGARET BEST: Actually, I also teach other important technical aspects of producing a botanical rendering such as drawing, journaling, brush techniques, form, composition, texture/detail, etc. However, it is directly through the teaching of these various aspects leading towards the creation of a complete botanical study, that I discovered very few had encountered any formal study of color. Even fewer had been taught how to make meaningful color selections. Most information readily available on the topic of color is often highly technical and very intimidating or too general to be useful to the unique needs of botanical artists.

Some of my students, in the context of botanical studies, have attended classes on color where they were presented with certain color palettes and shown how to achieve other colors through various blending combinations. But these mixing exercises tend to be laborious and result in almost robotic creation of color wheels, squares or strips and did not hold any real understanding of what actually caused the results and how it related to the plant kingdom. And little or no information was provided as to how and why the colors they were being required to mix, were selected in the first place. In essence, if you do not know something about the color you are using to mix other colors, how can you understand the results it provides?

When I first started to take a few botanical watercolor classes myself, I discovered that I would be provided each time with a supply list that included specific colors to purchase. I soon realized that this would change from teacher to teacher. Whenever I asked why particular colors and brands were chosen, I was seldom given a satisfactory explanation. For the most part, the answers appeared to be drawn from a teacher’s personal response to color or their own practical art background, rather than decisions based on sound testing or research of currently available materials.

As an artist I felt compelled to explore all the pigments available to me in watercolor and as a teacher I believed I was required to be able to provide solid reasons for my selections within the botanical context. So I set about testing every pigment I could find and some manufacturers, particularly M.Graham and Winsor and Newton, were very supportive of my interest and my process of testing. Other resources such as the Michael Wilcox books on watercolor paints and handprint.com were also useful, although I found I did not always agree with their test results. I then set about the process of acceptance and elimination of pigment colors based specifically on the interests of botanical art and my need to create a functional palette.

In my teaching, I decided the best way to impart my knowledge was to focus on the individual hues and to have my students explore the possibilities of each in separate workshops. We test and analyze the individual pigments for suitability to botanical art and then apply the knowledge in a botanical rendering to reinforce their findings.


AP: What is your opinion about the use of a limited palette for botanical artists?

MB: Unfortunately, Mother Nature provides a wider range of color than can be achieved with six primary colors. Full-spectrum color in painting just cannot be simplified that way – it is frankly too restricting and color accuracy is a distinct part of the scientific component of botanical art. I am aware that some teachers suggest the use of a limited palette of six primary colors to minimize the upfront investment in paints and also to encourage students to learn how to mix a wide range of color options by varying the ratios in the combinations of the chosen six colors.

Also, I have taken classes from teachers with this limited palette approach and watched the “pain” that fellow students (with minimal color knowledge) experienced from the limitations it imposed. But I know from years of experience in my own painting and also 22 years of teaching color matching in a commercial world, that this is a very complicated and stifling approach especially to beginners.

There are some fantastic secondary and tertiary colors available in permanent, mono-pigmented form right in a tube. These will add more vibrancy and life (as well as easily repeatable accuracy) to a botanical painting than most complex, blended primary color combinations.


AP: Besides the actual hue performance of pigments available on the market, are there any other properties of pigment that are important to know?

MB: Definitely. Most importantly permanency, transparency and toxicity.

I urge my students to avoid the allure of brilliance in colors like Opera that are not lightfast. The English artist Turner ignored warnings that he was using paint that would fade over time. Imagine having a legacy of being an artist that knowingly sold paintings that would fade!

The vast majority of my paints are transparent and I encourage students how to utilize that transparency to the fullest extent. Some colors offered in watercolor ranges could be arguably termed gouache – very opaque. I know some wonderful gouache painters but do not enjoy this medium personally or currently teach the use of paints that contain white pigment. I should also point out that I avoid paints that contain black pigment too.

On the topic of toxicity, I gave up cadmiums many years ago and took this message to my students – not only because of their toxicity but also because of their opacity. There are so many other wonderful options in yellow, orange and red hues to cadmiums that are transparent and very effective in color matching.


AP: Margaret, don’t you have a “white” class too?

MB: Indeed I do give a class on how to paint white flowers. But I offer this to more experienced students and those that have attended some of my color workshops. I believe you need a certain understanding of how to achieve the colors you want through exploring color before you can approach ways in which to “imply” whiteness with the appropriate degree of delicacy and light bias.


AP: You study color with such enthusiasm. What is it about color that gets to you?

MB: In my life BB (Before Botanicals) I was actively involved in a company with my husband, selling and distributing pigment to textile printers. This has spanned a period of 22 years. Incidentally, I remain involved in a technical , advisory capacity.

The demand on textile printers, by retailers and major clothing brands, for color accuracy is extremely high. I learned very quickly the value of consistent high quality pigment in order to be able to produce efficient and accurate color matches. I also became aware in a very hands-on way just how many colors were required in a basic palette to cover the blending of just about any color that was thrown at me. Vibrant, dull, muted, pastel or any other descriptive word – it had to get done with speed using the least number of pigments to make it easily repeatable. I trained color matchers, working for printers in all the major cities across Canada, how to accomplish this with our pigments.

So I guess this ability to respond to a demanding world of color accuracy became a part of me. I discovered also that pigments are universal to all color mediums and that the pigments used in textile inks were the same as those used in watercolor, oil paints, the automotive industry, etc. So all these pigments found in watercolors were already known to me. It was not long before I realized that our specific genre has unique color needs and that many paints offered by a number of manufacturers are of no use to us at all. And I felt that my students should know why some pigments can really do wonders for your artistic endeavors while others reduce your colors to a muddy mess.

My strict rule is:
Test and know every pigment you use intimately. Never test a color on a masterpiece!


AP: You learned about the work of contemporary botanical artists in the late ’90s. What type of art did you create before this chance encounter?

MB: I have painted all my life – starting literally when I was a child. My late father decided that few artists make a decent living so I was allowed art as a hobby and he steered me into teaching as a career. He generously paid for me to have weekly private art tuition. I stayed with the same tutor for 9 years and she exposed me to a wide range of mediums. But she encouraged me to focus on graphite, colored pencil and pen and ink rather than watercolor. She favored a loose and painterly style seen in skillful plein air landscapes and flower paintings and because I naturally lean more towards tight detail, I just could not pull it off to her satisfaction. But I could be as controlled and as detailed as I liked with graphite, colored pencil and pen and ink. I was also drawn to architectural studies in a strong way, but then also loved to do graphite and pastel studies of animals as well. Interestingly though through the years, I often sought botanical and found applying the intense detail very satisfying.


AP: Do you remember the botanical painting or drawing that caught your attention? What was it about this painting or drawing that moved you?

MB: I experienced a landmark moment but it was not one single painting that set me on this course. I remember (and will eternally treasure) the occasion when I realized that what I had been creating from time to time over a number of years was actually a defined genre called botanical art. I was amazed to discover that there were other crazy people like me around the globe that reveled in fine-detail depictions of flowering plants.

After immigrating to Canada some 30 years ago with my husband and then infant daughter, I was fascinated by the plethora of wildflowers that emerged in a burst of color each spring. So I began depicting them in colored pencil in fine detail. But believing them to be a personal record of my pleasure at the colorful emergence of life after a long, frozen winter, I kept them for my own and my family’s enjoyment and never attempted to exhibit them. They were framed and hung in our home and often drew admiring comments from friends. But they remained just that – records of the beauty of a spring awakening.

I consider my “chance encounter” with botanical art to be a gift from my mother. In the late 90’s, when visiting her in England to help her cope with health difficulties, I was encouraged by her to see an exhibition that had been promoted on a local BBC radio program. I was skeptical about the accuracy of my mother’s information but decided that a drive into the country with her on a sunny day was a great idea. If we could find the place she had noted on a small piece of paper, that would be a bonus.

After considerable searching we did find it. The exhibition was in a gallery in the grounds of a historical stately home at Twigworth and the artist featured was renowned colored pencil artist, Ann Swan. I took one look at her work and gasped at the fact that I had found another crazy person that had this intense love of detail in botanical subjects. And furthermore it appeared that she was successful at doing it .… for a living!!! I spent the next hour or more talking to her and pummeling her with questions. As a true educator and without hesitation, she generously gave me all the information I wanted to know about her materials, the existence of the botanical art organizations and so much more. I felt indebted, loved her work and bought a large print from her. I raced out the next day and bought all the colored pencils and paper she used. That was it – I have not stopped since – but I did make the switch to watercolors. Ann Swan is one of the leading botanical artists of our time in her particular medium and fully deserves her global recognition. I am not sure if she is aware of the impact she had on me as I have not connected with her since.

It was the legendary Anne-Marie Evans who helped me decide that the way I instinctively wanted to use watercolor would be highly suitable to botanicals and I made the switch of mediums. But I have never lost my love of both graphite and colored pencil and have returned recently to teaching both of these mediums.

Sadly, my mother has since passed away but I still have that piece of paper on which she wrote her note about the exhibition. A treasured reminder of her link to my future artistic endeavors.


AP: One of the things I admire most about your work is the movement in each of your pieces. There is always something flowing, bending, or swaying. How do you decide which aspect of a plant’s energy to capture?

MB: It is interesting that you have mentioned this aspect and that my work speaks to you in this way – quite a few people have said the same thing to me.

I believe it is linked to my intense study of every plant I depict before I commit to a final composition. And I feel it is essential in my teaching to have my students understand the importance of the observation and sketching/journaling stage. Many just want to get a drawing down in a hurry and start painting – that eternal pursuit of the instant masterpiece without having to earn it. But observation and sketching is the juncture at which you explore every facet of the plant’s unique structure and start to understand it – really understand it.

I distinctly remember Ann Swan saying that sometimes she takes up to a week or longer to work out a composition. That puzzled me at first. I felt I would possibly be too impatient for that approach and besides some specimens can die while the artist dithers about. But then I also read Margaret Mee’s book and how she relied heavily on journaling and photography to become fully acquainted with her subject and she insisted (as does another person I admire – Auriol Batten) on understanding where and how it grows. So it is rare for me to choose a subject in a pot or cut blooms from a flower shop. I prefer to experience firsthand how it grows naturally, how it adapts to a rocky cliff or how it hangs from the tree, etc. Living in Canada, that can be challenging as I have only 3 – 4 short months in which to do all this. So it is not surprising that most of my paintings involve plants found in other regions of the world. I have now been to Bermuda three times drawing like crazy (and teaching) in preparation for my upcoming exhibition.

I need to see how the flower holds itself naturally, how the stem curves, how the leaves are attached and the angles in which they are positioned relative to the rest of the plant. I never create just for the sake of creating – in other words I do not just start drawing on quality paper and pray that the composition will just magically evolve along the way. I “think” it all out through my sketching stage considering those unique angles, and any visual movement and flow. Like Ann Swan and most especially my mentor, Pandora Sellars, I give considerable time and effort to composition and how to capture the essence of the plant’s particular personality. On very rare occasions Mother Nature just presents me with a perfect composition in front of my very eyes. But they are unique gifts that do not happen very often.

I always do extensive sketches of the actual specimen and take numerous images with my trusty, little Olympus Stylus. But my drawings always tell me more than the camera. My digitals confirm certain finer details and sometimes interesting aspects of light that I may have missed or not remembered well. But my camera work never controls my color nor final compositions.


AP: Drawing upon your many years of teaching botanical art, how do students learn botanical art? Can your observations be grouped into “phases of learning”?

MB: The quick answer is that I have not sat down and formally attempted to categorize the adult art learning process in specific phases or stages. I am having so much fun with the hands-on teaching that currently draws from my own training as a professional educator, that at least in the short term, I will probably leave this to the academics of education. But I concede it is worthy of a doctorate study – if it has not already been done.

From my experience the defining phases of learning art is so much easier with children under the age of 12 that are still relatively free of inhibitions, fear of failure and other complex human behaviors that comes with adulthood.

I often say that when teaching art to adults it “can be like a box of chocolates” – you never know what you are going to get. Adults often come along with a mixed bag of just about everything ”The Good, the Bad and sometimes the Ugly”. I guess I have been hanging out in Hollywood quite a bit recently!! Joking aside, in teaching adults it is important to maintain a sense of humor and I have focused more on assisting my students to tear down the acquired obstacles and self-created barriers that get in the way of progress. I see this as essential for them to make the vital leap from knowing that to knowing how. And I then attempt to build the bridge between the two separate stages with my students but not for them.

Perhaps this can help explain. Most people remember with pleasure when they learned to ride a bicycle and the joy they felt to be in motion. Before getting on to a bicycle you observe and understand that it is the feet that keep the wheels turning and maintain the forward motion, that your hands steer the direction and that balance ensures you do not fall over. Putting it all together seems a monumental task until the exquisite moment when you experience the joy of the integration of all three key elements in one effective result. After that, you encounter all kinds of things that may try to slow you down, change your direction or even halt your progress, but once that controlled forward movement is felt and taken on board, the obstacles and any possible pain that comes with it, is taken in stride or put in context. The process of learning art is no different. But what bothers me most as an educator is that the half-hour solution and the need for instant gratification that many adults have learned to expect, sometimes permanently shuts down the process to carry on.


AP: Some notable teachers have created a step-by-step approach. Do you have one?

MB: I acknowledge the value of a step-by-step approach, especially with beginners. The success of this is seen in just how many “how-to” books are on the market. But I have not attempted to formularize my teaching approach and yet, given the amount of time and energy I put into workshop preparations, I sometimes wish that I had. I also believe that formularized art teaching tends to stifle the emergence of a uniquely identifiable style. At some point the student artist needs to embrace a wider circle of information sources that will enhance what they have acquired from the comfort zone that can become established by rigid step-by-step methodology.

I have heard many students say, “I can only paint well in the classroom and I am hopeless when I go home.” This is another manifestation of a rigorously disciplined teaching style. At some point the trainer has to let go of the bicycle saddle or take the training wheels off!

Rembrandt, for example, taught with a rigid approach that caused his students to paint so tightly in his particular style that it has taken experts centuries to separate his works from that of his students. I do not believe copying photographs or other renowned artist past or present, is the way to foster the meaningful learning of HOW TO.

But despite what I have said here, I should also point out though that in every class I offer a road map. My teaching is never directionless. I explain carefully what it is that I wish for (students) to learn from a particular exercise and how to fit it into their world. But I cannot make them fit into their world. They must be compelled to find the bridge and cross it and I feel honored if I can provide that opportunity. It is that moment that I find so rewarding – the moment when I know that I made a difference.


AP: If you were asked to provide a “Top 5 List of Suggestions” for classroom teachers and informal science educators wanting to incorporate botanical drawing and painting into their curriculum, what suggestions would be on your list?

MB:

  1. The need to nurture a fascination of plants and their importance to the survival of our planet, before a student even lifts a pencil. So the subjects chosen must have real significance in terms of their everyday lives.
  2. That botanical drawing is a scientific art form that is very literal and that it is a creative form of record keeping that has been with us longer than any other art form. This enforces its value.
  3. Educators need to foster the belief that every human has the ability to draw with meaning – it is only negative outside forces that can create a different belief system.
  4. The fact that every mark they make on a piece of paper with a drawing tool has value in terms of sharing information with somebody else. The more effective it is, the more information they can impart without words either written or spoken.
  5. That it is essential to fully understand the tools for drawing and painting before they can be applied effectively.


Also See…

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In Writing and Drawing in the Naturalist’s Journal: Reviving the Tradition of the Naturalist’s Journal as an Effective Learning Tool, biologists Joseph M. Dirnberger, Steven McCullagh, and Tom Howick describe the value of naturalist journals as a learning tool in today’s classrooms and in informal learning environments.

In a world of climate-controlled environments, Dirnberger et al. (2005) are passionate advocates for getting students outside and engaged in recording their observations in words and pictures. Concerned that climate-controlled environments and prepackaged electronic content have made the outdoors irrelevant and foreign, Dirnberger et al. (2005) have written an informative resource for teachers who may want to incorporate journals into their classrooms.

Dirnberger et al. (2005) have found that naturalist journals engage students with nature, increases student familiarity with and understanding of nature and establishes a sense of ownership over content that only moments before was unknown to the student.

The successful incorporation of naturalist journals requires teachers to continually remind students that the role of naturalist journals is to achieve enhanced understanding, not to create masterpieces in natural history art.

Dirnberger et al. (2005) have found that naturalist journals are the most effective as learning tools when:

  • Students pair handwritten descriptions with drawings.
  • Students are taught to be observant in the field, yet selective about the information they record.
  • Students limit their observations to what is relevant for any given task.
  • Students include scientific terminology (where appropriate), as well as scientific names.
  • Students’ written entries are kept brief-and-to-the-point, yet are complete enough to encourage thoughtful reflection.

Dirnberger, McCullagh, and Howick have several helpful suggestions for teachers and their paper is a valuable reference for any educator who wants to incorporate journaling into their curriculum. A copy of this article may be purchased at The NSTA Learning Center (99¢).


Literature Cited

Dirnberger Joseph M., Steven McCullagh, and Tom Howick. (2005). Writing & drawing in the naturalist’s journal: Reviving the tradition of the naturalist’s journal as an effective learning tool. Science Teacher, 72(1):38-42.

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The artist does not do what he sees, but what he makes others see.

– Edgar Degas

Today we have the incredible opportunity to learn from Anne-Marie Evans, a popular botanical art instructor and the author of An Approach to Botanical Painting, now out of print. The book, which she wrote along with her husband, is without a doubt the most sought-after instructional book in botanical art of the past ten years. If you are searching for this title, you know I am not exaggerating. This book is extremely difficult to find. On occasion one might find a used copy on websites selling used books. This book is a hot item and used copies begin at $500. A near fine copy can cost $1,500.

I had the good fortune to meet briefly with Anne-Marie during her recent trip to teach in the Los Angeles area.


About Anne-Marie

Anne-Marie attended art school and earned a Distinction in Fine Art, then studied for a Masters in Fashion, also graduating with a Distinction. After some years painting large canvasses, she felt somewhat unfulfilled. A trip to the British Museum, where she saw an exhibition entitled Flowers of East & West, made her change the direction of her art. She was enraptured by the botanical art she encountered.

From this time on, Anne-Marie became interested in botanical painting as an art form in its own right. Although botanical illustration and flower painting had been around for a while, the discipline of botanical painting had not as yet been identified in the same way as fine art had been over the centuries. She became eager to learn herself and to develop this particular form of art. With that purpose in mind, she sought to analyze paintings and the process involved in the creation of botanical paintings (courses in botanical art were not available at this time). Accordingly, she began to visit museums, art libraries, private collections and botanical institutions to study their respective collections of botanical art.

She became increasingly engrossed in the process of teaching this particular form of art, fascinated by the pairing of science and art.

Wishing to make the painting experience easier for her students, she attempted to break down the process and to identify and isolate those skills essential to the process, thus establishing her 5-Step Method which is now widely adopted.

Anne-Marie teaches her 5-Step Method at various locations in the US, Australia, South Africa, Japan, France, Holland, and the UK. She has received an award for excellence in the service of botanical art from the American Society of Botanical Artists. In 2005, she received the Veitch Memorial Medal by HRH Prince Edward for the Royal Horticultural Society in honor of the role she plays in the “resurgence of interest in and greater understanding of the depiction of plants.”


How It All Began

Anne-Marie established the very first botanical art diploma course in the UK and taught this course at the Chelsea Physic Garden in London for 12 years. This program was the first of its kind. Students in the first graduating class created the florilegium of the Chelsea Physic Garden. Their work was published in a book and the florilegium is still an ongoing project. Anne Marie’s students are currently involved in the creation of other florilegia, such as the Hampton Court Florilegium and Prince Charles’ Highgrove Florilegium.


How The Book Came To Be

One day a publisher approached Anne-Marie and commissioned her to write a book about botanical art. She only had three months to write An Approach to Botanical Painting. Anne-Marie met her three-month deadline, however the publisher let the book sit for another 1.5 years. Her instructional manual about botanical art, the first book of its kind, was left to collect dust. During this time, Botanical Illustration in Watercolor by Eleanor Wunderlich was published. Anne Marie took her book back from the publisher, repaid her advance, and set off to have her book published another way.

Anne-Marie’s son-in-law offered to publish the book, but sending it to a designer would have cost thousands of pounds. So he advised Anne-Marie to buy a computer and design it herself. Anne-Marie followed his advice and bought a computer even though she had never seen one or used one. She spent three weeks in her night-dress laying out the book in PageMaker. Anne-Marie was so unfamiliar with how computers worked, that she did not know about the Tab button and what it did. As a result, she spent a lot of time counting out spaces throughout the entire document. When Anne Marie finished laying out her book, she sent her self-designed manuscript to the printer.

This now-classic book in botanical art was never advertised. It sold purely by word-of-mouth. Anne-Marie eventually shipped her book to Australia, Asia, Africa, America, and Europe. When it was released, Anne-Marie’s book was a unique resource because certificate programs in botanical art did not exist at the time. Her book was published before Shirley Sherwood’s collection of contemporary botanical art became well-known and credited as sparking the current renaissance in botanical art.


A Conversation About Drawing, Learning, & Botanical Art


ARTPLANTAE: What makes drawing such an invaluable learning tool?

ANNE-MARIE: Drawing specimens helps to acquire a keen sense of observation which may eventually be transferable to other disciplines and life generally. Botanical observation and drawing does not merely consist of copying what is seen, but explaining what is there. The artist has to exercise his or her judgment on what is to be described, extracting those diagnostic features which characterize the species of the plant pictured. This is the reason drawing still surpasses photography in the field.

I do feel that this particular form of drawing and painting should be included in the school curriculum, involving as it does the combination of brain and manual skill. It is interesting that observational drawing was a mandatory subject in military academies until the first World War.

Furthermore, botanical painting bridges many disciplines such as history, art, the sciences, etc.


AP: I have had conversations with people who think botanical art is nothing more than a hobby. Botanical art’s history of plant documentation, plant exploration, and the rest of it does not seem to matter as much to them as it does to us. Have you ever found yourself in a position to defend the discipline and the work of botanical artists?

AM: Yes I have, often. It is relevant that in The Dictionary of Artists, not one botanical artist is mentioned. I think this has to do with the fact that, historically, most botanical painters have been amateurs who had not learned the academic disciplines of drawing and painting. Consequently, much of the work was charming, decorative and sometimes lacking in depth, or it was solely scientific with little regard for aesthetic qualities.

In my view, I do not think botanical art has surpassed that of the late 18th- and early 19-century masters such as Bauer, Turpin, Redouté, etc. Such artists were aware of the three-dimensional aspect of painting and the resulting use of a wide range of tonal values to express form, thus making their work exquisitely refined, as well as more true.

Botanical art has to describe both scientifically and aesthetically what is observed. This involves skills and brain activity. Serious stuff and surely not merely a hobby!

Today, the emphasis appears to lean mainly towards color and, to a degree, self-expression and novelty rather than veracity, occasionally approaching the gimmick (mainly in composition). In the 1880’s there was a shift from academic disciplines where students had to draw from plaster casts to learn to express the three dimensions convincingly in their paintings. Rendering and translating successfully the illusion of the three dimensions onto a flat surface had to be learned. The botanical art of today shows little regard for this aspect of painting.


AP: What should teachers do first when teaching individuals who are new to botanical art?

AM: It is important to let students know that they can attain a competent standard if they are prepared. It is, after all, a skill which everybody can reach, but it takes time and effort and sometimes a little pain in order to acquire it. It is like ballet or tennis — one has to work at it to obtain excellence.


AP: How many students have you taught?

AM: Thousands. I like to think they are all still painting.


AP: What would you like to see the field of botanical art accomplish? What isn’t the field doing that you think it should be doing?

AM: I think the field is in danger of becoming superficial. Botanical art deserves to be treated as a serious subject. I would like it to retain this aspect.

I would like it to reach more people so they can enjoy it too. However, I would prefer not to sacrifice quality for the sake of popularity. There is a tendency now to paint clichéd images pandering to current trends.

I would also like the judging of botanical art to show some commonly agreed criteria. The process is ofter far too loose leaving too much subjective judgment to individuals who seem to show different priorities in their evaluation process. A system should be established, indeed as it is in academia and athletics, with points for specific areas. People would then know exactly how they are being judged wherever they happen to be. How many times have I heard comments from a judge such as, “it’s a good composition” or “she has good color sense.” These are unqualified statements of subjective opinion rather than specific criticisms.


AP: How long have you been teaching the 5-Step Method?

AM: I have been teaching my method since 1985. It has been refined over the years. I am told by former students that the 5-Step Method provides them with a sound and comforting foundation.


AP: What should a good foundation course in botanical art look like?

AM: A course should contain elements of botany, art, history of botanical art, and an apprenticeship in the skills of depiction.


AP: Thank you so much for your time and for the opportunity to introduce you to ArtPlantae readers. And thank you for allowing me to include the Degas quote with which you begin your courses.



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