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Watercolour Fruit & Vegetable Portraits is a comprehensive resource for all artists. Billy Showell provides how-to instruction addressing the colors, shapes, textures, and patterns observed in fruits and vegetables. This book is for anyone who has ever wanted to paint the fruit and vegetables in their home garden.

Right from the start, Billy teaches readers how to observe patterns and how to think about the placement of various botanical elements. In her discussion of the drawing process, she does away with drawing’s “mythical status” and ensures readers that everyone is capable of learning how to draw. Billy takes the anxiety out of composition and patiently offers detailed instruction on how to mix browns, greens and dark washes. In a 4-page section that all painters will appreciate, Billy shares color combinations that will enable readers to mix the unique colors of 28 fruits and vegetables.

Demonstrations of ten essential watercolor techniques are presented. Techniques include wet-into-wet, color blending, color lifting, and dry brush. There are also demonstrations of how to glaze over shadows, how to use lifting preparation, how to scratch out highlights, how to use masking fluid to create the illusion of a shiny surface, and how to apply layers of paint to achieve color strengthening. Readers are also shown how to create highlights and shadows.

Several technique tips and small projects are presented in this book. Tips and projects include:

  • How to paint white vegetables
  • How to paint flowers and the veins on petals
  • How to paint patterns and highlights on sweet corn
  • How to paint patterns found on zucchini
  • How to capture the texture of artichoke bracts
  • How to create and apply the appropriate colors when painting black bean pods
  • How to paint corn husks
  • How to paint the changing colors of an asparagus stalk
  • How to paint roots
  • How to paint small fruit

The last four projects in the book are detailed step-by-step tutorials about how to paint kohlrabi, pumpkins, lemons, and assorted berries. Tutorials range in length from 42 to 59 steps.

Watercolour Fruit & Vegetable Portraits by Billy Showell contains many practical tips, step-by-step tutorials, and examples of finished studies. Throughout Billy discusses mistakes often made by artists and provides solutions along the way. Billy’s thorough approach ensures that even the most timid watercolorist will feel at ease applying what they learn from this comprehensive resource.

This book will be released in the U.S. in mid-April 2009 and will be available at ArtPlantae Books. You can pre-order this book here.


Related articles:
The Beauty Is In The Details

Do you want to grow your own fruit and vegetables?

Are you looking for new ideas in garden design?

Would you like to turn your home into a cozy self-sufficient paradise?

What are you waiting for? Block off May 1st, 2nd, and 3rd on your calendar. Do not schedule other commitments for this weekend because you’ll be plenty busy at the 2009 L.A. Garden Show. Attend lectures, meet with landscape designers and fill your wagon with plants! ArtPlantae Books joins nurseries, plant societies, artists, and home & garden specialty merchants in the Marketplace to celebrate A Festival of Flavors.

ArtPlantae Books will encourage you to Observe, Connect and Create when you visit us. We have made arrangements for unique learning opportunities and activities. Here is a snapshot of what we have planned:

Saturday, May 2: Attention Young Gardeners! Meet the author and the illustrator of Wiggle and Waggle, Caroline Arnold and Mary Peterson. You will also meet author, illustrator and educator, Marianne D. Wallace.

Sunday, May 3: Meet the authors of The Urban Homestead. Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen will be signing their guide to self-sufficient living in the urban landscape. After you learn how to “grow food anywhere”, be inspired to draw and paint your harvest with botanical artist, Sally Jacobs who will be demonstrating her craft this afternoon.

See you in the garden!

NEAR AND FAR
Botanical drawings in colored pencil and paint by Wendy Hollender

The Interchurch Center Corridor Gallery
475 Riverside Drive at 120th Street, New York, NY 10115, 212-870-2200
www.interchurch-center.org for directions

April 6 to May 8, 2009
Reception: Tuesday, April 7 from 4 to 7 pm
Artist demonstration: Tuesday, April 28 from 12 to 1:30 pm

Free parking on the day of the reception only in the building garage at 61 Claremont Avenue, after 4:30 pm.
Gallery hours: Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm

Artist website: www.drawingincolor.com

View this opportunity and others by clicking on the Classes Near You tab.


Field & Studio Productions, LTD

www.fieldandstudio.com
Instructor: Christy Baker Knight
Art coach, botanical illustrator and member of the American Society of Botanical Artists since 1997, offers private lessons and professional training in botanical art drawing and painting in the following media: watercolor, gouache, graphite and pen-and-ink for those wishing to hone their technical skills in a supportive environment. Located in Chastain Park, Atlanta, Georgia, studio hours are flexible and references are available. For more information, please visit the website above.

watercolourflowerportraits_lg1

Details, details.

Botanical artists chase details. They are obsessed with them. Fortunately, there is no shortage of instruction about how to capture details on paper in Billy Showell’s Watercolour Flower Portraits.

Artists reap the benefits of Showell’s hard work and experience as she generously shares what she knows about painting flowers, painting leaves, and painting stems in detail. Beginners will appreciate learning how to view specimens from a proper perspective, how to see patterns in nature, and how to approach drawing flowers, leaves and negative space. All levels of artists will appreciate the section dedicated to color mixing and the color combinations Showell recommends to paint 21 specific flowers and twelve specific shades of green.

Differentiating Billy Showell’s book and her upcoming book, Watercolor Fruit & Vegetable Portraits (April 2009), from other instructional botanical art books is the detailed instruction in each step-by-step demonstration. Short tutorials contain 3 – 5 photographed steps, while the four featured projects contain up to 39 photographed steps. Artists can learn a lot by completing the featured projects. They can learn how to place stripes and strong veining on the flower of a slipper orchid and how to paint the spotted pattern on a slipper orchid’s leaves. The lily project will test artists’ abilities to mix and manage shades of green and the rose project will turn artists into experts on how to paint stamen, serrated leaves, and prickles. The delphinium project requires artists to master a delicate touch in order to recreate the slight and elegant features of this plant. Showell’s clear explanations and descriptive photography about executing these and other essential techniques are the next best thing to being in a classroom.

Showell’s patient and thorough instruction ensures beginners and experienced artists alike will develop and refine the skills necessary to create their own flower portraits.


  • Purchase Watercolor Flower Portraits at ArtPlantae Books.
  • Are you a fan of Billy Showell’s artwork, books, and classes? Check out the current Ask The Artist event at ArtPlantae Today.
  • Next Week: A review of Watercolor Fruit & Vegetable Portraits

Billy Showell is the author of Watercolor Flower Portraits and a five-time recipient of the Certificate of Botanical Merit, an honor awarded by the Society of Botanical Artists. ArtPlantae Books is pleased to host an author event celebrating the publication of Billy’s second book, Watercolor Fruit & Vegetable Portraits.

You are cordially invited to participate in a question-and-answer session with Billy Showell. Billy looks forward to receiving your questions. If you would like to ask Billy a question pertaining to botanical art, her books, her painting techniques, etc., please send your question to AskTheArtist@artplantae.com no later than Monday, April 13, 2009.

Learn more about Billy Showell at www.billyshowell.co.uk.

This Spring there will be two opportunities to learn about re-creating plants from the fossil record.

On Thursday, April 23rd, Marjorie Leggitt will present The Science of Art: Recreating Earth’s Ancient Plants at the Denver Botanic Gardens. Ms. Leggitt will describe how scientific illustrators create plant life from impression fossils. She will also describe how she created ancient landscapes at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science.

Then on May 16th, Ms. Leggitt will present Tulips, Pineapple Trees and Dinosaurs at the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center. She will describe how artists work with paleobotanists to create visual interpretations of ancient plant life on earth.