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Stella Sherwood Vosburg, (1869–1943) Phacelia campanularia ssp. vasiformis, Desert Bells, Mojave Desert. 1929. Watercolor on paper. Private collection.

Stella Sherwood Vosburg, (1869–1943) Phacelia campanularia ssp. vasiformis, Desert Bells, Mojave Desert. 1929. Watercolor on paper. Private collection.

This weekend exhibitions exploring the history of California wildflowers will open at the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens in San Marino and the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden in Claremont. A third exhibition will open on March 15 at the Theodore Payne Foundation in Sun Valley, CA.

The exhibition When They Were Wild: Recapturing California’s Wildflower Heritage is a collaborative project between The Huntington, Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden and the Theodore Payne Foundation for Wild Flowers and Native Plants. Works from all three collections, along with loans from several other public and private collections, will be on view in the Huntington show, with related displays at the two other institutions and at the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden. More than a dozen public programs including lectures, workshops, plant sales, and wildflower walks will be offered at The Huntington, Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, and the Theodore Payne Foundation.

When They Were Wild draws on a rich heritage of wildflower illustration to take a closer look at California’s natural and cultural history: exploring the source of the state’s floral bounty; how people have used, categorized, and depicted these flowers; and how wildflowers came to represent the state.

Below is a list of learning opportunities to be held in conjunction with this exhibition:


At The Huntington (www.huntington.org)

    Adult Workshop – Wildflowers at Home
    Saturday, March 16; 9:30 a.m.–noon
    Join award-winning floral designer Carolyn Bennett in creating works of art with fresh and dried wildflowers. Huntington Members: $70; Non-Members: $75. Registration through brownpapertickets.com.


    Lecture – California Wildflowers and Early California Nurseries

    Saturday, March 23; 2:30–3:30 p.m. Bart O’Brien, director of special projects at Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, talks about the unusual journey that California wildflowers took into California gardens. A book signing follows. Free; no reservations required.


    Adult Workshop – Herbarium Tour and Pressed Flower Workshop

    Saturday, March 23; 9:00 a.m.–noon
    Learn about the Huntington’s herbarium (a reference collection of preserved plant specimens) on a tour with Paul Meyers. See some of the plants and the art that supports scientific research, then create your own herbarium specimen. Huntington Members: $40; Non-Members: $45. Registration through brownpapertickets.com.


    Preschool Series – Wild About Flowers

    Wednesdays – March 27, April 3, 10 and 17; 10 a.m.–noon
    Explore the gardens and the exhibition with instructor Laura Moede. Each class includes garden and art projects, stories, and more. Fee includes one accompanying adult. Ages 3-4. Huntington Members: $85; Non-Members: $95. Registration: 626-405-2128.


    After-School Adventures – Pressing Flowers

    Wednesday, April 10; 3:30–4:30 p.m.
    What’s so wild about wildflowers? Instructor Laura Moede leads youngsters into the garden to explore these fascinating flora. Students make their own pressed flowers to take home as cards or mini masterpieces. Ages 5–6. Fee includes one accompanying adult. Huntington Members: $15; Non-Members: $20.
    Registration: 626-405-2128.


    Second Thursday Garden Talk – California Wildflowers for the Home Garden

    Thursday, April 11; 2:30 p.m.
    Bart O’Brien of Rancho Santa Ana Botanical Garden discusses how to select, grow, and care for California native annuals in the home garden. After the program, the audience is invited to self-tour the “When They Were Wild” exhibition. Free; no reservations required.


    Lecture – Beauty Within and Beauty Without: California’s Native Peoples and Wildflower Fields

    Friday, April 19; 2:30–3:30 p.m.
    M. Kat Anderson, botanist and author of Tending the Wild, looks back at the tremendous diversity of California’s wildflower fields and how deeply intertwined wildflowers were with California Indian culture. In exchange for benefits like food, medicine, and ornamentation, indigenous people employed judicious gathering strategies and stewardship of the landscape. A book signing follows. Free; no reservations required.


    Second Thursday Garden Talk – Gene Bauer: Paper, Paint, and Postage

    Thursday, May 9; 2:30–3:30 p.m.
    Gardener, artist and author of Botanical Serigraphs: The Gene Bauer Collection, Gene Bauer tells the story behind her Golden Native serigraphs of the 1970s, some of which are included in “When They Were Wild”. A book signing follows. Free; no reservations required.


    Lecture – California’s Wildflower Artists

    Saturday, May 18; 2:30–3:30 p.m.
    For more than 100 years, artists have documented the California flora for science, education, and conservation. John Wickham, former president of the Theodore Payne Foundation, discusses the work of a wide range of artists, their stories, and their drive to record this extraordinary flora. Free; no reservations required.


At Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden (www.rsabg.org)

    Nature Walk – Wildflower Walks
    Saturdays and Sundays, March 23 – June 9; 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
    Guided walking tours with RSABG nature interpreters feature beautiful California wildflowers and seasonal highlights. General admission.


    Plant Show – California Wildflower Show

    Saturday – Monday, March 30 – 31 and April 1; 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
    A special exhibition of wildflowers from across the region brought indoors for an intimate viewing. Monday, April 1, is Wildflower Show Senior Day offering free Garden admission and tram tours for visitors over 65. General admission.


    Field Trip – Blooms and Beauty of Bighorn Mountain

    Sunday, April 7; 8 a.m.–6 p.m.
    Naomi Fraga, RSABG conservation botanist and Eric Garton, RSABG director of visitor services, lead this fascinating and beautiful outing to Bighorn Mountain Wilderness in San Bernardino County. The trip highlights a rare transition zone between the mountain regions and Mojave and Sonoran deserts. Roundtrip transportation and lunch are provided. RSABG Members: $65; Non-members: $95. Limited to 10 participants. Registration: 909-625-8767 ext. 224 or registrar@rsabg.org.


    Lecture – Clara Mason Fox: Pioneer, Painter, and Poet

    Saturday, April 20; 11 a.m.
    Clara Mason Fox, one of the featured artists for the “When They Were Wild” exhibition, is the great aunt of Jon Seeman, co-author with his wife, Lorraine Passero, of Clara Mason Fox: Pioneer, Painter, and Poet of Orange County, California, a book about Clara’s life in the late 1800s and early 1900s. A book signing follows. General admission.


    Lecture – California Wildflowers and Early California Nurseries

    Sunday, April 21; 2:30–3:30 p.m.
    Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden’s Grow Native Nursery in the Veterans Garden. Bart O’Brien, RSABG Director of Special Projects, talks about the unusual journey that California wildflowers took into California gardens. A book signing follows. General admission.


    Lecture – California Wildflowers and Early California Nurseries

    Saturday, May 11; 1–2 p.m.
    [See listing above.]


At the Theodore Payne Foundation (www.theodorepayne.org)

    Poppy Day Plant Sale & Spring Festival
    Saturday, March 23; 8:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m.
    A seasonal celebration of California’s state flower with a large native plant sale, expert advice, vendors and more. TPF Members receive 15% off plants; Non-members 10%; Memberships available at the door. Registration: 818-768-1802.


    Garden Tour – 10th Annual Theodore Payne Native Plant Garden Tour

    Saturday and Sunday, April 6 and 7; 10 a.m.–5 p.m.
    Showcasing more than 40 gardens in the Los Angeles area, each planted with at least 50% California natives, this special ten-year anniversary tour celebrates native landscapes of the past, present, and future! TPF Members: $10 per person for both days; Non-members: $15. Available at www.theodorepayne.org or by phone: 818-768-1802.


    Field Trip – Wildflower Chase in the San Gabriel Mountains

    Saturday, April 13; 7:30 a.m. –5 p.m.
    In this all-day excursion to view spring-blooming annuals and perennials in local mountains, you meet at TPF and travel by van to the most superb flower-filled sites. Lorrae Fuentes is a botanical educator and native plant advocate and producer of the Theodore Payne Wild Flower Hotline. TPF Members: $75; Non-members: $100. Registration: 818-768-1802.


    Adult and Family Workshop – Wildflower Watercolor

    Saturday, April 20; 10 a.m.–noon
    Capture the beauty of native spring wildflowers in this hands-on class for budding artists of all ages. No experience necessary. Bring your own hat and water, all other materials provided. Instructor Laura Stickney was TPF’s 2012 Artist in Residence. Free, thanks to a generous gift from Susan & Dan Gottlieb and The G2 Gallery, Venice. Pre-registration is limited and required. Registration: 818-768-1802.


    Lecture and Nature Walk – An Introduction to California Native Bees

    Saturday, May 4; 9–11 a.m.
    Approximately 1,600 bees are native to California–and all have co-evolved with the native flora. This introduction includes an illustrated talk covering bees’ great diversity followed by a bee walk on TPF grounds. Led by Hartmut Wisch, whose fascination with insect fauna comes from working for 35 years as a naturalist guide. TPF Members: $20; Non-members: $25. Registration: 909-625-8767 ext. 224.

This month the featured resource is YOU!

During March, our focus will be on the comments and suggestions that came up during January while readers completed the Reader Survey.

Readers completing the survey provided helpful feedback. This month I want to take some time to cultivate the type of community resources readers are asking for on this site. While reading through the survey, it became clear that publishing a single announcement about what readers are asking for wouldn’t be enough to put into action the changes readers are requesting. A single announcement would have been pushed down below the fold and would’ve scrolled off the bottom of the page in only a few days. So let’s take some time with this.

Before we begin, I want to make a couple of announcements.

A quick comment about commenting. Some readers have told me they do not comment because they don’t want to use their real name. I understand this completely. Please know that when commenting, you only need to use your first name or enter a screen name. You do not need to enter your first and last name. Hopefully this makes you a little more comfortable. The community conversation readers are asking for can only happen if readers communicate with each other, so I hope you will consider participating in the conversation when you feel comfortable.

Beginning next week, I will begin to post topics in which readers have expressed an interest. If you would like to suggest a topic of your own, please suggest a topic for discussion or pose a question to peers by dropping a note in the
new Suggestion Box. I will compile a list of topics and questions and will post a new topic or question for discussion each week (or as topics/questions are submitted).

As this month progresses, I hope our conversations will establish the momentum to take us well beyond March and into a new era of learning here at ArtPlantae.

Classroom teachers, what would you like to ask artists?

Artists, what do you want to ask naturalists?

Naturalists, what do you want to ask fellow naturalists, artists and teachers?

Drop a Note in the Suggestion Box




UPDATE: Join the Conversation



Crinum asiaticum, watercolor, 20

Crinum asiaticum, watercolor, 20 x 20 inches. © 2012 Sharon Birzer. All rights reserved.

Scientific illustrator
Sharon Birzer heads to Hawaii next month. Care to join her?

Here’s the latest in
Classes Near You!


Botanical Illustration at Kahanu Garden

Kahanu Garden, Maui
March 18, 2013
9 AM – 2 PM

Natural science illustrator Sharon Birzer will help students develop observation skills and connect with nature as they spend a lovely day at Kahanu Garden in this ‘art in the garden’ workshop. Participants will work with various media. Presented by Kahanu Garden and Hāna Arts. Cost: $20, bring your own lunch. View Details/Register


About Sharon Birzer

www.sharonbirzer.com
Scientific illustrator Sharon Birzer is a teaching artist at Seattle Pacific University and Frye Art Museum, and has completed illustrations for the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture at the University of Washington. Sharon shows her work at Shift Collaborative Studio in Seattle, Washington.

This information has also been added to the Classes Near You sections for
Hawaii and Washington.

Tools for Seeing at Aurea Vista

Tools for Seeing at Aurea Vista

See plants more clearly.

See anything more clearly with the magnifying tools now available at ArtPlantae’s retail location at Aurea Vista.

Visit the drafting table on the upper level to see what you can see using the helping hands magnifier, the flexible gooseneck magnifier, the 15x loupe and the headband magnifier with the adjustable headband and flip-down lens.

While at Aurea Vista, be sure to stop by the education section on the lower level. If you’re in the Inland Empire, come on out to the desert this weekend. Visit ArtPlantae at the Coachella Valley Wildflower Festival on Saturday, March 2 at the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument (more info).

The magnifying tools above are also available online at ArtPlantae Books.


Related

ArtPlantae 2013 Event Schedule

Download Information

Download Information

Established in 1670, the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) is comprised of four gardens that collectively represent one of the largest plant collections in the world. The garden is also home to the RBGE Diploma in Botanical Illustration. The diploma course is a two-year program emphasizing observational drawing and the creation of artwork in pencil, pen and ink, and watercolor.

Blended Learning Begins June 2013
The RBGE Diploma in Botanical Illustration has run successfully for five years as a weekly course in Edinburgh. Beginning this summer, those involved with the program will be able to share their knowledge and expertise with a worldwide audience. The RBGE program has developed an exciting new Blended Learning option – which means there are block study weeks in Edinburgh (two in Year 1, one in Year 2) and the rest of the course is delivered online through their new online system called PropaGate.

Applications are now being accepted for the inaugural class of this new long-distance learning opportunity. This new program begins June 2013.

Get the Applicant Handbook



This information has also been posted to Classes Near You > Scotland.

How to Use a Pencil

Click to download

Click to download

Sometimes the most interesting resources are right in front of you and you don’t even know it.

I had one of those “Hey, I didn’t know this was here” moments this week. Lost in the shuffle of all that zips across the computer screen is a resource I haven’t spent much time digging into.

My discovery?

Books about drawing in pencil!

The best thing about them is that they are as much about history as they are art, they’re free, and they’re available as downloadable PDFs.

The notable discovery of the week is
Pencil Studies by Charles Rowbotham. Published in the late 1800’s, Pencil Studies was one of the handbooks published by Winsor & Newton. This book, along with 32 others, was published as a series of drawing books written and illustrated by individual artists. Rowbotham’s handbook about pencil studies was Number 2 in the series. Other handbooks addressed topics such as landscape painting, marine painting, portrait painting, miniature painting, flower painting, figure drawing, murals, ornamental art, wood engraving, etching, perspective, illumination and even the art of botanical drawing (I haven’t found this one yet).

In his handbook, Rowbotham discusses how to create foliage using pencil strokes and explains to readers how he created the four pencil sketches in his handbook. His explanations are concise and delightfully eloquent in that 17th century way. Rowbotham explains how a broken stem can be created using a few “sharp touches” instead of through the deliberate placement of a line. He explains how dirt walking paths need only be hinted at, and how grass can come from
“a few decided and effective touches”.

He also demonstrates the power of negative space and dark values while creating tree canopies, dense foliage, foreground plants, background plants and other landscape elements for readers.

Equally interesting, and somewhat entertaining, is the Winsor & Newton ad for drawing pencils. During this time, Winsor & Newton sold six kinds of pencils, each serving a specific purpose. The penny drawing pencil was for office or school use. The twopenny drawing pencil was for “artists and professors of eminence”. The threepenny drawing pencil was for architects and draughtsmen. The fourpenny drawing pencil was “warranted perfectly free from Grit”. The fivepenny drawing pencil was of “high quality in color, smoothness, and ready erasure”, while the sixpenny drawing pencil was manufactured with the “finest Lead”, was grit-free, contained “a larger quantity of Lead than usual”, and produced a “good volume of color”.

(Note: Lead pencils don’t really have lead in them. They are graphite and clay.)

Of course my discovery of Rowbotham’s handbook changed the course of my afternoon. More searching uncovered other treasures, all free and available as PDFs. Before I leave you with a list of only a few of my discoveries, I would like to share a quote I found in the book, Pencil Sketching from Nature (1906):

The pencil is indeed a very precious instrument after you are master of the pen and the brush, for the pencil, cunningly used, is both,
and will draw a line with the precision of the one, and the gradation of the other. — Ruskin

My Discoveries:



Related


Disclosure: ArtPlantae is a partner of Kobo Books

Asclepias tuberosa, © Lynne Railsback. All rights reserved.

Asclepias tuberosa, © Lynne Railsback. All rights reserved.

Drawn to Nature II
Brushwood Gallery
Ryerson Woods
Deerfield, IL
March 3 – April 30, 2013

The ASBA Reed-Turner Woodland Botanical Artists’ Circle in Long Grove, Illinois and Friends of Ryerson Woods in Deerfield, Illinois are pleased to announce Drawn to Nature II.

Drawn to Nature II presents recent works of the Reed-Turner Woodland Botanical Artists’ Circle, a local Chicagoland group affiliated with the American Society of Botanical Artists. With a new collection of original botanical art, members return to Brushwood with their second show. The exhibition includes drawings and paintings of plants and wild flowers common (and not so common) to the woodlands and prairies of the Midwest landscape. Here, the artists seek to further the interests of conservation science, botany and horticulture, and to represent the beauty of plants in our lives.

An opening reception will be held at Brushwood Gallery. The reception is open to the public, free of charge and will be held on Sunday, March 3rd from 1-3 PM. Eight special events will be held on Sunday afternoons during the show from 1:00-2:30 PM. For further inquiries and hours, please contact Brushwood Gallery at (847) 968-3343 or visit the Events page on the website of the Friends of Ryerson Woods.


About The Reed-Turner Woodland Botanical Artists’ Circle

The Reed-Turner Woodland Botanical Artists’ Circle consists of a dedicated and enthusiastic group of botanical artists,

Hydrangea arborescens, © Barbara Klaas. All rights reserved.

Hydrangea arborescens, © Barbara Klaas. All rights reserved.

current and former students of the Chicago Botanic Garden and is guided by the parameters and goals of the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA). The ASBA is one of the premier organizations promoting botanical art around the world. Consistent with the mission of the ASBA, the Reed-Turner Woodland Botanical Artists’ Circle works to further interest in botanical art, conservation science, botany, and horticulture at the local level. The group also strives to emphasize the beauty and importance plants play in our daily lives by increasing public awareness through education, promotion, and exhibition of its members’ art in collaboration with local institutions. Founded ten years ago, the group meets monthly at the Reed-Turner Woodland on the last Saturday of the month from 9:30-11:30 AM. Members of the public with an interest in botanical art are welcome to attend.

Learn more about the Reed-Turner Woodland Botanical Artists’ Circle



Related

Making Connections and Inspiring Action to Preserve America’s Prairies