ASBA Journal 18-2_ASBA Journal - American Society of Botanical
Transcription
ASBA Journal 18-2_ASBA Journal - American Society of Botanical
JUNE 2012 J VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2, ISSN 1523‐5165 O U R N A L O F T H E A M E R I C A N S O C I E T Y O F B O T A N I C A L A R T I S T S Complete Listings and Registration Materials in This Issue - Register Early to Reserve Your Place! New ASBA Website Debuts to Rave Reviews BookEnds Returns with Review of Charming New Natural History Volume Dissection Guide Highlights Benefits of Really Getting to Know Your Plant Wildflower Watch Follows ASBA Artist Echeveria sp., Hens and Chicks, by Dorothy DePaulo into Colombia’s Wilds American Society of Botanical Artists The Botanical Artist © ASBA, ISSN 1523-5165, published four times a year, is the official Journal of the American Society of Botanical Artists, Inc., a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to promoting contemporary botanical art and to encouraging further development and appreciation of this continuing artistic tradition. Annual membership is open to individuals and institutions worldwide who share an interest in botanical art. Artwork printed in this publication has been contributed by our members. Reproduction for other purposes is forbidden without written permission of the artist(s).For membership information, turn to page 31. Advertising Rates: 1/2 page - $300, full page $600. Back Issues (as available) Back issues as available - $9 for members and $15 for nonmembers including shipping and handling. Send check or money order only, payable to ASBA to: American Society of Botanical Artists at NYBG Journal Back Issues 2900 Southern Blvd. Bronx NY 10458-5126 Toll Free PH: 1.866.691.9080 Email Contact: [email protected] The ASBA Board of Directors Lea Rohrbaugh, President Derek Norman, Vice President, Finance Development Co-chair, & Wildflower Initiative Coordinator Jean Mikulla, Secretary Cynthia Rice, Treasurer, & Finance and Development Co-chair Bobbi Angell Mary Bauschelt, ASBA Annual Awards Chair Marcia DeWitt Carole M. Ely, Nominating Committee Chair Jan Boyd Haring Wendy Hollender, Artistic Development Chair Martha G. Kemp, Membership Chair Irene Messina Kathie Miranda Susan Frei Nathan Carolyn Payzant Lynne Railsback, Silent Auction Chair Sarah Roche, Education Chair Terry Ruiter, Chapter Liaison & By-Laws Chair Myra Sourkes Isaac Sutton Alice Tangerini, Members Gallery Coordinator Charlotte Staub Thomas Carol Varian Catherine Watters Jody Williams, Public Relations Chair, Website Committee Chair Honorary Directors Diane Bouchier (USA) Julius Brown (USA) Jennifer Crompton-Phillips (Australia) Anne-Marie Evans, FLS (UK) Pat Kay, DEd (USA) Kazunori Kurokawa (Japan) Shirley Sherwood, PhD (UK) James J. White (Deceased) (USA) Staff Executive Director Robin A. Jess Director of Exhibitions - Carol Woodin Administrative Assistant Linda M. Crawford Annual Meeting & Programs Coordinator - Marilyn A. Garber Annual Meeting Registrar - Sandra McNicol Bookkeeper - Veronica Gallardo Computer Advisor - Deborah Shaw Counsel to the Board - Siegmar “Sig” Silber Journal - Editor/Designer - Libby Kyer Table of Contents Notes from the Executive Director..................................................................................................................................................2 No really, that’s how I do it......................................................................................................................................................................3 Message from the President of the Board.......................................................................................................................................4 Backstory, Bios from Your Board..........................................................................................................................................................8 The Science of Botanical Art1 ................................................................................................................................................................9 Botanica Collected.......................................................................................................................................................................................10 Conversations with our Artists ........................................................................................................................................................12 BookEnds.............................................................................................................................................................................................................13 Color Curriculum.......................................................................................................................................................................................14 18th Annual ASBA Meeting and Conference ...........................................................................................................................15 Calls for Entries..........................................................................................................................................................................................24 Happenings.....................................................................................................................................................................................................27 Wildflower Watch.......................................................................................................................................................................................29 Workshops.........................................................................................................................................................................................................30 History of Botanical Art........................................................................................................................................................................32 Editor’s Note: To accommodate the needed listings for our Annual Meeting and Conference, Hang it UP!, CyberCorner and Studio Style have graciously denoted their space in this issue. Please look for their return in September’s TBA. Notes from the Executive Director Dear Colleagues, ristotle said “In all things of nature, there is something of the AI marvelous.” would like to believe that the vast majority of people are moved by nature – even if only the most obvious examples – a stunning sunset, the beauty of a beloved’s face, the majesty of redwoods. As botanical artists, we tend to find the marvelous in more modest subjects; but that doesn’t make them less fascinating. How many people are charmed by the delicate form of a dried pod or a simple acorn, or would spend hours painting a mushroom or lichen? We are truly fortunate to be able to see and appreciate the marvelous in some of nature’s most obscure specimens. Remember to keep your eyes open and your pencils ready for the weird and wonderful this summer as you visit parks, botanical gardens, preserves and even your own backyard! Review the Call for Entries for Weird, Wild and Wonderful on page 25. The big news at ASBA is our new website www.asba-art.org! We express our deep appreciation to Jody Williams, Web Site Task Force Chair and her Committee: Carole Ely, Wendy Hollender, Pat Jonas, Derek Norman, Cynthia Rice, Deborah Shaw and Alice Tangerini. Our thanks also go to many others who have worked on content especially Bobbi Angell and Myra Sourkes. We sincerely thank the Hunt Institute, who so graciously hosted our website for years, providing the genial expertise of Frank Reynolds. We look forward to continuing our close relationship with the Hunt. And finally, we thank the nearly 75 members whose donations to last year’s Annual Appeal provided the funding to make this possible. Read more about the website and Jody on page 8. Now is the time to learn about the Bartram family and their contributions to botanical knowledge in early 1700s. Akin to Lewis and Clark in their explorations but focused on plants, John Bartram and his son William documented the flora of the early American colonies. William became our first botanical artist. Consider painting or drawing plants from the extensive list the Bartrams identified and catalogued. You’ll find information in the Calls for Entries: In (Continued on Page 4) T he ASBA wishes to thank The New York Botanical Garden for most generously providing us with offices and many related services. We are honored to share our vision with this revered institution. Geometric Composition and Painting Acorns design terms but check always that the observations are botanically correct. By Helen Allen Observation, Recording and Drawing eometric compositions are an excellent way to display a I begin with quick skeleton sketches in my sketch book, variety of similar botanical specimens. I have a collection of where I am able to explore vertical and horizontal axes, planes acorns, picked up in and the general movement of Richmond Park very close to the subject. I use my clutch where I live in Ham, Surrey, on pencils, beautifully balanced holiday in France and Central so they behave well in linear Park, New York. I initially chose drawings and also shade acorns of a similar size in a variety well. I draw on tracing paper of stages, fresh and dried. vellum. It is very forgiving, Cupules have very different scales and by stacking layers I forming patterns and textures, correct drawing errors as I and are useful for identification. go, rather than erasing and Each peduncle, having a character making the same mistake of its own, began to give an extra again! As a child, I had a dimension to the page design. book about the human Wanting nine “elements” on the skeleton, with transparent page, I arranged the acorns in paper layers overlaid on the three groups of three. This could skeleton, showing vital organs, be a very boring composition, I circulatory system and know that equally spaced musculature. I do the same, elements that all look the “same” beginning with the skeleton elements can start with a simple concept - here a 3x3 item grid - which is require a bit of thought. The Arranging then pushed stylistically to create more interest as well as more information. and adding form and detail in pattern needed to be broken. I layers. I make notes about threw in a pair of acorns of the same details and make magnified size, almost black, and then a very drawings to provide explanation large acorn and a pair of cupules. It of parts not clearly seen without was a little bit like playing chess, a lens. moving the acorns around until there My four layers are: first an was harmony of colour, shape and accurate and measured line form, disunity in size and unusual drawing of the subject; second, negative spaces. one with contour lines to show The main rule of geometric volume and movement; the third composition and randomly placed or shows detail only and the fourth scattered compositions is that the layer combines detail and form. spaces between the objects should be The fourth drawing is where I smaller than the space between the have fun, using putty rubber and group of objects and the margins of tiny chips of plastic eraser, the page. So, when matting and adding shading and lifting detail. framing the piece, I close-mounted the Working with a constant light image with a wide double mat similar The four layers used to create a great drawing, with the top layer providing and detail in pencil. The layers are kept handy throughout the painting source is key to discovering and in colour to the paper to tightly form process, to provide a continuing reference. rendering core and graduated enclose the image. The “aperture,” values for form. By squinting or format became a special, my eyes and viewing an acorn, precious space for my gems. I see a very light area, a very Acorns are such beautiful and dark area and a variety of interesting little fruits to paint. tones in between. I see form. They are the Botanical Diva’s In very light areas colour is dream! We can show off so many of bleached, there is little detail our painting skills and techniques. and less contrast. In very dark Fruits colors vary widely: fresh areas, colour and detail are green, very glossy and slightly absorbed and become indistinct striped, dark, almost black, shiny with little contrast. In the or matte. sitting in richly patterned forefront I see full local colour, and textured cupules. all the detail and a full range Cupules’ textures vary enormously; of tones, what I call contrast. almost suede, crisp and evenly The illusion of form is patterned, knobbly and shiny, further enhanced by including hard. Peduncles are little ambient light at specimens’ connectors, often with embryonic edges. This is shown with fruits attached or a wisp or curl of lighter tone at lighter edges, fibre where the peduncle has Looking over Helen’s shoulder, with all materials needed close to hand, she begins and a tone darker than this at parted company with the tree. Look her painting with soft washes to provide a tint of local color, working wet into wet. darkest for the detail and the unusual in Washes needed for form are then laid in slightly dryer. (Continued on Page 5) G TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 3 Letter from the President of the Board I hope you enjoyed this year’s warm winter and incredibly early spring. Across the eastern United States, this quirk of nature brought a profusion of early-blooming plants and an unbelievable season for wild flowers. Plants that normally bloom in May burst into flower far ahead of schedule. It was as though nature’s clock had gone haywire! In my home state of South Carolina, mayapples ignored their name and bloomed in mid-March. There were cascading hillsides of pink lady’s slippers, along with trout lilies, trilliums and Jack-in-the-pulpits two months ahead of schedule. It was a perfect time to paint for pleasure or to select a specimen for the Bartrams’ Exhibition. It was also an opportunity to illustrate native plants in all their glory. There is no end to the bounty and surprises that nature can bring! On another front, I recently attended a slide presentation on Losing Paradise given by Carol Woodin, our Director of Exhibitions*. Her talk was a poignant reminder that many plants around the world are threatened with decline or extinction. The presentation was based on the ASBA’s 20092010 Losing Paradise exhibition, for which artists began to paint as long ago as 2006. At this point in time, one might think the material would be a little old and dated. But, this was definitely not the case! Carol’s talk captivated the audience, and a lively question and answer session followed. Despite the lapse of time, the material was as compelling as ever. The message about the urgency of recognizing endangered plants and educating the public was just as fresh today as it was two years ago. There was so much enthusiasm for the topic that I began to wonder if another round of Losing Paradise should be planned, where our members could illustrate a new series of endangered plants. It’s an intriguing idea! As you probably know, the ASBA is committed in the immediate future to the Bartrams Exhibition in Philadelphia (spring 2013), which will be followed by an exhibition of Weird, Wild and Wonderful” (2014) undertaken with The New York Botanical Garden. Even so, the opportunity for further exhibitions centered on endangered plants remains an idea for the future. If you haven’t visited our new website (www.asba-art.org), you have a special treat in store. You will be thrilled and amazed! It has been six months in the making and this is only the beginning. We continue development of the site with secure arrangements for financial transactions, a members-only section and many other benefits. So, stay tuned and check in often to catch the latest news and art of fellow members. Sincerely, Lea Rohrbaugh *Carol’s talk was given at A Window on Nature, an exhibition featuring ASBA member Asuka Hishiki’s artworks, at the Arsenal in Central Park, New York City. FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR..., CONTINUED (Continued from Page 2) the Footsteps of the Bartrams on page 25. And don’t miss the opportunity to attend the 18th ASBA Annual Meeting and Conference in Chicago! A fabulous event is planned for October and the hotel accommodations are very reasonable and generous. Check it all out beginning on page 15 then visit www.asba-conf.org to register. I’d like to leave you with a motivational quote from our own “Aristotle,” former ASBA President and Secretary Carol Hamilton, “It isn’t a matter of being good enough to paint, it is a responsibility to paint if you were born an artist.” Robin A. Jess Executive Director The Art of the Cover Each issue, we ask the cover art creator to answer these questions: Why did you choose this specimen? What materials did you use? Do you have a painting or drawing tip for our members? Here’s what Dorothy DePaulo has to say: Echeveria sp., Hen and Chicks, colored pencil on film, ©Dorothy DePaulo 2011 The ancestors of the Echeveria in my painting were in the garden when we moved into our house over 40 years ago! They have survived droughts and over-watering, good soil and bad, sun and shade. No matter where or when I transplant them, these little succulents flourish. I love the variations of color and patterns that the “mother hens” and “chicks” make as they crowd together, and that is the reason that I chose to paint them. In a big garden, they tend to get overlooked. So, I chose to render them larger than life. The 20x16” painting is done in colored pencil on drafting film. I love working on film. I use double-sided film so that I can layer colors on both sides to get good color intensity and depth. I make my line drawing on one piece of film, then tape another piece of film over it, I can fill in color, form and details without worrying about unwanted outlines. I generally work on the back of the film after the front is complete. If I make a mistake, I can easily erase it by applying a little (Formula 409) household cleaner with a brush, then blotting it with a paper towel. Even large areas can be erased this way, and the surface is just like new again. Echeveria sp., Hens and Chicks, colored pencil on film, is seen in 4 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 NO REALLY..., CONTINUED (Continued from Page 3) With acorn well placed for observation, Helen begins the color layers needed for form, local color, and detail. edges. This provides ‘reflected light’ to soften edges so they appear natural. Less is More With so many exciting features to explore and depict, I find it easy to be seduced into faithfully recording every tiny detail. However, in practice I consider why I am painting the specimen to determine how I will paint. Is it to inform scientifically, to be a painting of great beauty, or to be a combination of the two? The picture for this article is decorative, fun and convincing. I took some liberties and still was scientifically accurate. In this case, less was more. Volume and detail can be conveyed in different ways. Lack of detail tells the viewer very little. Too much detail conflicts with form and may be confusing. It is possible to give as much information as required, and respect the viewer’s intellectual capacity to understand, enjoy and complete the image. Back to my final drawing. This gives me all the information I need for painting. I have sometimes made a fifth layer in colored pencil. This method is useful with a complex composition when balancing line, form and color. Painting I use a variety of hues from a number of manufacturers and a bundle of sometimes very scruffy brushes, useful for dry brushing texture. But I do have immaculate brushes with fine points, miniature and round for washes and detail. For the fruits I began working wet onto damp paper, creating form by manipulating paint very gently. I over-washed several times with a variety of hues; allowing each layer to dry. This way I was able to control clarity of colour. With the nuts beginning to look 3-dimensional, I added stripes with a fine Quercus fruits/acorns, 14x18”Watercolour on Fabriano Artistico Extra White, ©Helen Allen 2012 brush, and lifted others out. To keep the illusion of form, I did not add detail to the light areas and it all but disappeared in the dark and shaded areas. The cupules were fun to paint but difficult because the texture catches light in unusual places. My tonal drawing was my guide and I carefully painted in detail. Shadow was added to further create volume and I amended my colors to indicate lack of light. My shadow colors were/are a mix of all hues used in the painting and also the mess of dirty colors often seen in the lid of one’s paintbox; mucky and murky and receding . The finishing touches were unifying and very dilute washes here and there, adding glow. Cupules were brushed gently with muted tones to darken and harmonise. I had fun with this painting, bringing the acorns to life and remembering that sometimes we have to sacrifice detail for form to achieve volume. Passings Christina Davis, 1942-2012 hristina Davis passed away on May 8, 2012, after a three-year-long battle with ovarian cancer. Chris was one of the first members of ASBA, serving as its secretary in its early years. Born and raised in Long Island, she graduated from CW Post College with a Bachelor of Arts degree. A member of the Art Students League of New York, graduate of the NYBG botanical illustration program, fellow of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Florilegium Society, and member of the National Association of Women Artists, she was a recent recipient of their prestigious Artists Bell Crammer Award. Her artworks are found in personal and public collections around the world. Recently, Christina Davis Art Works, a Generational Legacy, was published. Chris was a talented and enthusiastic artist, producing almost 100 paintings in the last three years. We will miss her wonderful smile, delicious sense of humor and her great ideas. She was a woman of many gifts who has been taken away from us much too soon. C TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 5 Jody Williams J Public Relations Chair, Website Task Force Chair ody is the powerhouse behind ASBA’s new website. From the first discussions of what was needed to dreams of what could be, Jody has shepherded the new www.asba-art.org and will continue to do so into Phase II. This is her second year as a member of the Board of Directors. Born in Atlanta, Georgia, Jody grew up surrounded by the cornfields of Illinois. She loved natural history, collecting rocks and seashells, enjoying identifying what she had found. As a child, she always took art classes in school. Her marketing drive appeared at a young age, as she would hang a clothesline across her front yard and pin her watercolors up to sell them. After earning a degree in mechanical engineering at University of Illinois, Jody worked in various industries including petroleum, aerospace, and aluminum automotive parts manufacturing. At McDonnell Douglas, she worked on developing new materials used on spacecraft, aircraft and missiles. In those fields, Jody learned to evaluate situations, recognize problems and opportunities, and create a structured approach to getting results. After receiving a large watercolor painting of iris for a wedding gift, Jody took a few watercolor classes. Flowers were often her choice of subject and always on a white background. She was asked why she didn’t put any backgrounds in the paintings and replied that she just felt the flowers didn’t need them. When her children came along, Jody spent eight years at home with them. She volunteered with a national committee of the Society of Automotive Engineers, working with executives at GM, Caterpillar and others, implementing a comprehensive project to promote math and science and introduce engineering design concepts in K-12 grades. This project included developing curricula, working with schools, teaching teachers the program and recruiting engineers to partner with teachers. Working with those executives was an eye-opening experience for Jody, prompting her to get an MBA. Once her children were in school, she went back to work for a major corporation that manufactured performance materials, primarily focusing on marketing, but touching on fields of accounting, strategy and ASBA Website — June 2012 By Jody Williams acking up our bits and bytes, ASBA moved to a new virtual home, launching its redesigned website April 23rd. Opting for a shorter domain name, easier to say, that conveys the nature of the organization and includes the term “ASBA,” our new online address is www.asba-art.org. The first week, over 2000 visits, from 39 countries on 6 P A freeze-frame image from the top portion of our new website Home Page, featuring artwork by Annie Patterson in this view. Artwork from our members rotates through the window, creating visual interest. 6 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 logistics. She worked on TV commercials, magazine ads and traveled extensively. When that company was sold and moved away from her home in St. Louis, Jody decided it was a good time to go back to an original love – art. When she became aware of ASBA she was immediately reminded of those early paintings she did of flowers. Here was a whole organization of people who didn’t care if her flowers had no backgrounds! Now, she looks forward to honing her botanical art skills, which began in a class with Marilyn Garber at the Missouri Botanical Garden. She says she has completed every exercise in Katie Lee’s graphite drawing book. She hopes to develop a group of botanical artists in the St. Louis area. She is proud of her farm in the St. Francois Mountains, one of the oldest Precambrian igneous mountains in North America, characterized by their pink granite glades. She and her husband spend much time and energy on the land, maintaining a small vineyard and a large garden, working on conservation projects. Her interests in plants lean toward heirloom vegetables and old country farm flowers – peonies, iris, hydrangeas, gladiolas. She is intrigued by mushrooms and loves to forage for morels, chanterelles and black trumpets. Jody’s service on the ASBA board has been focused on Public Relations, including blogs for ASBA exhibitions, and by extension, the website. In her words, she “likes to do significant work with good people. That’s Jody Williams, pictured in front of the what life is all about.” She is ancient mountains she loves fulfilled by working on a great project and seeing what has been accomplished. She believes that there are a lot of great projects to be done at ASBA and she is excited about being involved in them going forward. continents, brought views of over 21,000 pages! Check it out. A visual feast awaits you, loaded with information about our activities and events, great images, education offerings, and inspiration for all aficionados of botanical art. Early member feedback includes: “wow,” “visually stunning,” “Love it, love it, love it!” “Incredible,” “brilliant,” “an enormous achievement and a considerable advance for the Society,” and “this may indicate the very turning point of botanical art in our time to a higher level of recognition.” We’d like to hear from you!. Go to [email protected], and tell us what you think. The launch completes Phase I of our Website project, to make the site more visually compelling, showcase more members’ artworks, and provide the capability to maintain and update content ourselves, without the need for programming expertise. Phase II focuses on increasing interaction with our members, allowing for online applications and renewals, online submission of content for both the Journal and website, and member-managed updates to areas like the Member Gallery & Teacher Directory. Phase II also incorporates the Annual Meeting Registration for 2013 into the main ASBA website. Our thanks to all who contributed to making the launch a success. By Dick Rauh Dissection D sWhat is the position of the ovary? A t some point you will have recourse to use a hand lens or a issection, especially if you have dissecting scope. I keep one next to my drawing table, with never done it before, can be a little daunting. You have been no more than 10x magnification. You’ll want a pair of dissecting looking at flowers for a long time, and needles, a rigid wire sharpened to a point inserted into a because you have been drawing and handle, available at any scientific equipment company. Have a painting them you are that far ahead of clean single-edge razor blade handy. These are sold at those botanists who don’t have your eye. hardware or painting supply stores. Once you have drawn the I know the temptation to say, “I draw entire blossom, the time for dissection has arrived. nFirst, holding the flower in one hand, gently remove a what I see,” makes this process a little more difficult. I want you to draw what you see, but I also want you to know petal(s), to see what’s inside. Try not to remove all. The filaments of the stamens may be adnate/attached to the petal. what to see. Removing all may take the A scientist, or botanical juror, is stamens out. generally looking for a typical nIn some blossoms the petals representation of a particular are fused into a tube. In this case, plant. We are dealing with nature, take the needle; insert it inside the which is filled with variables. You corolla, to break open the cylinder may be faced with a model that is from bottom to top. Gently spread anything but typical. Conversely, the corolla apart, to reveal its because two species are extremely secrets. Gently is the key word in alike, very subtle differences are all these processes. extremely important for nPetals are fairly easy to remove, classification; things that you may as opposed to sepals that tend to need a hand lens or a dissecting be persistent and more difficult. If scope to see. To know what to sepals get in the way, try bending emphasize, to know when you are them out of your field of vision with looking at a typical part of the your needles. Get a clear view of flower, to know when you are what’s inside, and check it against looking at an artifact, or damage your references to guarantee that that was caused by bad handling what you are seeing is typical for is the goal of dissection. that flower and family. Now you Here is what I do. See if it works can begin to count and measure, for you. and find the origins of the 1. Check the written references various series. about the species, and thus discover nNext isolate a single stamen what is established as the typical Papaver somniferum, Opium Poppy, Sir Arthur Henry Church 1905. Church and view it from front and back. characteristic of the plant. was known for his amazing dissection images.Church built up layers of paint in How is the anther attached to the 2. Look at the flower without a a precise manner, to raise the surface of the ovary in a natural sculpted shape. filament – at the base, like a lens. Turn it around. Try to find the point of view that best shows the general shape, and the lollypop/basifixed, or in the middle of the back/dorsifixed? most information, about the parts. Measure the outer length Look at its particular features. Make notes! nNow we can get rid of the androecium and view the pistil(s) and width of the flower, and perhaps the size of various parts. Draw a rectangle lightly on your paper – tracing paper works in all their glory! Try a section, to discover how the ovary holds well – and do a rough sketch of the entire flower/inflorescence. its immature seeds/ovules. A cross-section means a cut across This is known as the habit drawing, and includes the the ovary perpendicular to its axis, a longitudinal section runs stalk/peduncle/pedicel and some leaves. Write down basic vertically. Checking the results of well-made sections under the information, things that look interesting, note measurements ‘scope is a very satisfying experience, and perhaps a temptation and anything that jogs your memory for drawing a final image. to convert these into artwork, like the illustrations of Maud Purdy. 3. Ask yourself these questions: Longitudinal sectioning does not have to be confined to the The inflorescence: ovary. Arthur Harry Church created incredibly beautiful floral sIs the flower solitary, or part of an inflorescence? images doing vertical sections through entire flowers, which he sIs the flower regular/actinomorphic or is it irregular/zygomorphic? used for teaching purposes. sHow many series? Is the flower complete? For the most part, the purpose of dissection is to fortify your sIs the flower perfect/bisexual? botanical knowledge of a plant so that your paintings are sAre flowers attached terminally or laterally? accurate as well as beautiful. Keep this in mind as you throw sHow many sepals? Are they free or fused? caution to the wind and rip through your favorite blooms! When a dissection turns out to be inspirational, as well as useful, sHow many petals? Are they free or fused? you may be creating a whole new aspect of botanical art, a sHow many stamens? Where are they attached? world of highly enlarged and beautiful details of what makes The pistil: flowers tick. sIs it visible or are any parts of it visible? Ó sHow many styles? Stigmas? Carpels? TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 7 Influenced by a childhood reference book of insects, plants and animals, as well as her fascination with the work of 18th century naturalist and scientific illustrator Maria Sibylla Merian, Hishiki’s paintings are painstakingly detailed and exacting – individual hairs are visible on her renderings of lifesized ants. Offering a visually nourishing treat, she faithfully captures crisp, ripe colors of locally grown vegetables, as well as the sensuous formations of heirloom tomatoes. In her fanciful ABTE series, plants grow butterflies instead of flowers and brilliantly patterned caterpillars sprout Camellia japonica ‘Chandleri Elegans’, watercolor on vellum, ©Akiko Enokido 2012 September 14 - November 21, 2012 15th Annual International American Society of Botanical Artists at The Horticultural Society of New York 148 W. 37th Street, 13th Floor, New York, NY Artists’ Reception: Friday, Sept. 14, 2012 he jury team of Patricia Jonas, Kathie Miranda, and Derek Norman chose forty-three works from a field of 192 entries for this year’s showing of fine botanical art. Artists from around the US and from Australia, Brazil, Canada, Japan, and the UK have been included. Artists whose work will be shown are: Beverly Allen, Christine Battle, Margaret Best, Dorothy DePaulo, Maria Alice deRezende, Jean Emmons, Akiko Enokido, Margaret Farr, Ingrid Finnan, Keiko Fujita, Pamela Geer-Gordon, Monika deVries Gohlke, Cherie Ann Gossett, Asuka Hishiki, Wendy Hollender, Rosemarie James, Leah Kaizer, Heeyoung Kim, Karen Kluglein, Patricia Luppino, Dorothy Gardner McCauley, Carrie Megan, Regina Gardner Milan, Mary Ann Neilson, Mary Anne O’Malley, Tomoko Ogawa, George Olson, Hillary Parker, John Pastoriza-Pinol, Susan Pettee, Betsy Rogers-Knox, Lizzie Sanders, Judith Simon, Fiona Strickland, Carol Till, Catherine Watters, Kerri Weller, Andrea Wilson, and Carol Woodin. A catalog will be published once again this year. Contact: Carol Woodin; PH: 718.817.8814; email: [email protected] Member Exhibitions T April 26 – June 6, 2012 A Window on Nature: Art of Asuka Hishiki Arsenal Gallery, Central Park, Fifth Avenue at 64th Street, NYC. his exhibition offers over 35 watercolors illustrating a poetic and detailed observation of plants and insects; Asuka’s portraits of vegetables from New York City’s celebrated Greenmarkets and her imaginative plant-like insects from her Association of Type B Metamorphosis Entomologists (ATBE) series. T 8 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 Brassica oleracea, Giant kohlrabi, 9.5x11.5”, watercolor on paper, ©Asuka Hishiki 2012 mushrooms on their backs. Though a stickler for details, she also forms personal relationships with her subjects, naming each of her tomatoes based on their shape (Mr. Big Nose and Yakuza Brothers) and creating intricate histories for her whimsical insects. Asuka displays her paintings on stark white paper that suggest the form of collection boxes with the hope that others will see as much beauty and invest the time in her specimens as she does. Contact: PH: 212.360.8163, or visit www.nyc.gov/parks/art April 15-May 27, 2012 33rd Virginia Watercolor Society Juried Exhibition 4205 Victoria Boulevard, Hampton, VA otanical artist Linda C. Miller has been selected for this exhibition on view at The Charles H. Taylor Arts Center. This is the premier juried competition for watercolor painters across the state and was jurored by Dan Smith of Hickory, NC. He selected 105 paintings in all water media, by 105 artists, chosen from 494 entries by 175 VWS member artists. Contact: The Charles H. Taylor Arts Center; Punica granatum, “Holding On, 20x29”, watercolor on paper, ©Linda C. Miller 2011 PH: 757.727.1490 B Other Exhibitions April 26 - July 22, 201 Mesquite 7366 N. Paseo del Norte, Tucson, AZ 85704 ohon Chul Park celebrates the mesquite, one of the Southwest’s most plentiful trees, in an exhibition that includes fine furniture, functional works, and fine art created from and about the deep and dense wood of this iconic tree. The mesquite is an essential element in the desert ecosystem and an important aspect of the region’s cultural history. Mesquite Complete by Joyce Peters is included in the exhibition. Joyce created her work using only paint and paper she made from the mesquite tree. “For the making of mesquite paint, I collect sap from the tree in the spring, and in late fall I gather gooey, shiny bark, which Mesquite Complete, 19x15”, hand-made mesquite resin paint supplies the resin,” on hand-made mesquite paper, ©Joyce Peters 2012 explains Peters. “It requires boiling, straining, and boiling a second time. The paint is not an easy medium to use because of its granulation. The paper ingredients include leaves, thin stems and seed pods.” Contact: Gillian Rice, PH: 602.375.8831, email: [email protected] April 28 – December 31, 2012 Focus on Nature XII: Natural History Illustration Photography Gallery, New York State Museum, Madison Avenue, Albany NY eaturing top artists from 15 countries this biennial juried exhibition has continued to grow over the past 24 years. ASBA’s Francesca Anderson was the guest juror for FON XII, because she has been selected to participate most often. This year’s exhibition features 93 natural history illustrations, representing the work of 72 illustrators, selected from 503 entries, submitted by 219 artists. Approximately one-third of the selected artists are new to the entry process. Countries represented for the first time are Thailand, Germany, and Switzerland, with other artists from Australia, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, England, Italy, Japan, The Netherlands, South Korea, Spain, Portugal, and the USA. The exhibition’s goals are to demonstrate the important role illustration has in natural science research and education, to stimulate curiosity about the world, and to bring clearly into focus images of nature that people might not otherwise be able to visualize. T F “Natural history illustration is a field that requires keeping pace with changing technology, and knowledge, and Focus on Nature has evolved to reflect these changes” said Patricia Kernan, scientific illustrator at the Museum and exhibition organizer. “This year’s exhibition includes both digital and traditional illustrations. Whatever technique is used, the aim is for accuracy and clarity to communicate the result of natural history investigations.” ASBA members whose work was selected are: Bobbi Angell, Karen Coleman, Monika de Vries Gohlke (Jury Award), Asuka Hishiki (Jury Award), Jee-yeon Koo, Elayne Leighton, Dianne McElwain, Sharron O’Neil, Dick Rauh, Betsy Rogers-Knox, Susan Rubin, Anita Walsmit, Jeannetta Van Raalte, Esmee Winkel (Jury Award), Carol Woodin Contact: www.nysm.nysed.gov/fon/. M Botanical Art Branches Out argaret Farr has been doing Madonna paintings “on the side” for 20 years or so. She tells us it definitely branched out from botanicals, and, in fact, always completes the plant life in the painting before turning to the figure. She finds that plants are her “security blanket.” Once she’s spent a hundred hours of working on the botanicals, she won’t dare mess up the “harder part!” Botanical icons stand in a long continuum in the combination of botanical and religious painting. Every Flemish “Annunciation” paid homage to the least little weed in the scene. The plants portrayed in her own works frequently are seasonal cues to Mary’s feast days. For instance, Regina Caeli Laetare(in a private collection), refers to the Feast of the Annunciation on March 25, so all of the plants are ones that appear in Northern Virginia in very early spring. Margaret was excited to see this new feature that focuses on unique settings for botanical art, and hopes we see a connection, as she does, with botanicals through the ages. She is happy to bring her secret passion “out of the closet” and bring botanical subjects to a wider audience. Regina Caeli Laetare, watercolor and gilt on paper, © Margaret Farr 2011 Amorphophallus titanum with Sarcophogid sp., Corpse Flower with Flesh Fly, colored pencil on film over map of area where species are found ©Susan Rubin 2011 TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 9 a limited edition prints. When Manabu was first starting out, he took evening classes at The NYBG to learn basic botany. He later taught here, and continues to teach when his schedule allows at the Tucson Botanical Gardens. Born in Tokyo, Manabu developed a deep interest in nature, reflective of traditional Japanese interests in the harmony of man and nature. After World War II, Manabu came to the US in 1953, studying industrial design at the Pratt Institute, Brooklyn. After graduation, he joined the staff of Raymond Loewy Associates, where he designed award winning Nature Promotes Me and I Promote Her showrooms for Nikon and Sony, developed exhibits for Expo By Stephen Sinon 67 in Montreal and Expo 69 in Osaka, illustrated a film for the he New York Botanical Garden’s LuEsther T. Mertz United Nations and designed a Library is known for the size helicopter interior for President and scope of its holdings, John F. Kennedy. dating from the twelfth century to He became much sought after for the present. The Art and Illustration book illustration, and his work Collection comprise numerous appeared on stamps for The collections of original art, largely National Wildlife Federation and The botanical. It is a valuable and useful United States Post Office. resource in the study of botanical Like many botanical artists, illustration, an invaluable teaching Manabu created a garden of his own tool for students in the Gardens’ and filled his home with more botanical illustration classes and an houseplants. Well might one wonder outstanding source of materials to how such a successful designer enhance the Library’s ongoing could turn his attentions solely to exhibitions program. botanical art? Manabu attributes the This collection currently contains profound change to a rainy weekend over 24,000 original works in pencil and in the Hamptons when he began to pen and ink drawings, watercolors, oil draw and paint flowers. Manabu paintings, woodcuts, lithographs, states, “The flowers in the garden engravings, photography and sculpture. communicated to me in ways things It represents the broad range of like toasters never had.” His illustrative techniques employed in botanical illustrations were first depicting natural history subjects published in an eight-page spread in and includes examples of the Audubon Magazine in July 1973, works of many well known and, like his subjects, his career has botanical illustrators. blossomed ever since. In addition, the collection contains anabu always works from life to artworks which were created to get the coloring and texture of illustrate the Garden’s scientific the flower on the spot. His advice for publications, and continues to grow botanical artists is to paint all you as scientists donate original Magnolia grandiflora, Magnolia, 19.5x24”, watercolor on paper, can – everyday, always from life. illustrations used in their ©Manabu Saito 1976 Painting around the globe in Costa publications, and artists donate Rica, Surinam, Bangladesh, Trinidad their works to the collection knowing and South Africa, his largest commission they will be housed in climate controlled was illustrating 1,600 flowers appearing storage and made available for study and in 1984’s Wildflowers of North America exhibition for future generations to enjoy. which took some ten years to complete. There is one collection which deserves Manabu has exhibited his work at The New to be much better known. This article York Botanical Garden, The Brooklyn Botanic celebrates the most recent donation to Garden, The Horticultural Society of New York, the Mertz Library, the work of Manabu The Hunt Institute for Botanical Saito. Having taught in the Botanical Art Documentation, Arizona-Sonora Desert Certificate Program, he recently moved to Museum, The Tucson Botanical Garden Arizona to enjoy the benefits of the and New York State Museum in addition climate and paint the region’s flora. The to many galleries across the country. His Library was given 220 pieces of his artworks are in the collection of Dr. artwork with the promise of more to Shirley Sherwood and are published in come. The gift ranges from original her volume A Passion for Plants: illustrations, submitted for publication, Contemporary Botanical Masterworks. to pieces painted in situ in the Costa Rican rain forest and Sonora Desert. Manabu’s preferred medium is watercolor and he paints as often as he can for Manabu’s work joins that of wellseveral hours each day in his studio and known botanical artist, also found in the outdoors in his garden or wherever his collection, Anne Ophelia Dowden, which travels may lead. One time he painted holds some 600 of her research some mushrooms in the mist by lying on paintings. They first met chosen by the a shower curtain while a friend held an Frame House Gallery in Louisville, KY in the early 1970’s as part of a select group umbrella over him. Manabu has had the of contemporary natural history artists, honor of painting an endangered flower whose work was offered by the gallery in Wild plantain, 32x26”, watercolor on paper, ©Manabu Saito 2007 in Arizona, being led to its protected T M 10‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 applied so that each petal and leaf have depth and brilliance all their own. After his first trip to Arizona in 1967, Manabu has harbored a dream of building a garden of native cacti and succulents. It is this group of plants that he is currently painting. Red Rose Mallow, watercolor on paper, ©Manabu Saito 2002 habitat by a team of rangers who watched over him as he labored in the soaring temperatures to capture the fragile beauty of the plant in bloom. Often while painting in the wild he finds his lap becomes his studio. All of Manibu’s works are signed with a red insignia which he identifies as a salamander, his good luck symbol. Working in the Oriental manner with his paper laid flat and his brush held vertically, his paintings can take up to two weeks to complete. He says, “I always look at the color of the flower first, then the shape and then the habitat.” Layers of watercolor are Maidenhair Fern, original is watercolor on paper, Manabu Saito, limited edition print ©The Frame House Gallery, Inc. 1977 Errata In Volume 18-1, corrections are: nIn the article Indigenous Botanicals of Arizona, the correct information is: Best in Wet Medium was awarded to Gillian Rice for her watercolor portrayal of Echinocereus coccineus or Claret Cup Cactus (pictured right). The image caption for this painting should read: Best in Wet Medium, Echinocereus coccineus, Claret Cup Cactus, watercolor on paper, ©Gillian Rice 2010. nIn the same article, the photo of the artwork that received Best in Show, by Margaret Pope, was strangely cropped by the printer. The complete image is pictured at left: Best in Show, Peniocereus greggii, Queen of the Night, More Than a Beautiful Flower, colored pencil on paper, ©Margaret Pope 2011. nThe Silent Auction Thank You, page 15, neglected to include: Beverly Behrens, Carolyn Payzant, Suellen Perold, and Louisa Rawle Tiné. Their contributions are greatly appreciated and I apologize for this oversight. Lynne Railsback, Silent Auction Board Chair. nThe caption for the image Lilium bulbs, on page 16, listed artist Leigh Ann Gale’s name as “Gill.” TBA apologizes for these errors. TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 11 A conversation with Nancy Savage By Joyce Westner Not far from where Henry David Thoreau wrote about wild fruits while walking through fields, meadows and woods, Nancy Savage seeks and finds those same plants as subjects for her botanical art. “Every time I sit down with a new leaf I think, ‘How am I going to do this?’” How did you get into botanical art? I stumbled across it when I read a newspaper article about classes at Wellesley College’s greenhouse. It said if you like drawing and plants, you should try it. So I tried it in 2004, I’ve been doing it ever since, and after eight years I’m about to graduate from the Wellesley College Friends of Horticulture Certificate Program. I took 40 classes, more than required, and will continue to take classes. Are you an artist or a plant person at heart? An artist – although in 2004 art was all new for me. I took botany in college, it was my favorite class, and I love the outdoors, the beauty and the miracle of plants. Where do you get your subjects? I walk in the woods or I go to the New England Wildflower Society’s Garden in the Woods. Mostly I like things in their natural setting, plants native to New England or anywhere – I painted native cactus on vellum in a class in Arizona. My certificate project was based on Thoreau’s “Wild Fruits” manuscript and I did ten paintings including fox grape, jack-in-the-pulpit, even yew, which has a red berry-like aril, mentioned by Thoreau in his journal as the fruit of the yew. The Thoreau Institute owns Thoreau’s sister Sophia’s herbarium, where I can draw from her specimens. What’s your favorite medium? Watercolor (but I love graphite too), the translucency of the color – it shines and has a lot of light. I love how it moves on the paper and lets me create so many different values. © Arisaema triphyllum, Jack-in-the-Pulpit, 11x14”, watercolor and pen and ink on paper, 2011 12 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 Do you enter juried shows? The Concord Art Association has accepted my paintings of Thoreau’s fruits for a two-person show in October of 2013. I’m just beginning to enter juried shows, but it’s wonderful to be part of the New England Society of Botanical Artists [Nancy is its president] where all of our members can exhibit. When do you paint? Mid-day when the light is good. Where do you paint? Right near my living room window – I’ve turned the living room into my studio. I don’t even put away my materials anymore, I just show people what I’m working on. Do you teach, and if so what special aspect of botanical art? No. What technique are you still trying to master? Leaves! [Nancy laughs.] All those bumps and veins. I have tons of room for improvement and my biggest challenges now are composition and dry brush. What one thing do you do that would surprise other artists? I have a Degas quote I rely on. I read it whenever I paint. “Drawing is not what you see but what you must make others see.” I’m trying to tell the plant’s story – it reminds me what my goal is. A conversation with Kathleen Garness By Joyce Westner Kathleen’s schedule made for a tricky conversation as she was either at work, taking down one of her exhibits, helping at an orchid show, monitoring native plants, teaching an art class, or – when the time seemed right to talk – celebrating her birthday! I was exhausted! “I’ve been fascinated with plants since I was three and saw a little yellow oxalis pushing up through a crack in the sidewalk. It’s a metaphor for the artistic struggle.” How did you get into botanical art? Orchids have fascinated me for many years and it was a short step from collecting them to painting them. But when I realized the threats to our native orchids’ habitats I had a focus for a consistent body of work. After 11 years in the Chicago Botanic Gardens “Plants of Concern” rare plant monitoring program I became a volunteer nature preserve steward, which gave me some great material as inspiration! Right now I am working on a series of all the native orchids of Illinois. Are you an artist or a plant person at heart? Do I really have to choose?? I don’t see a dichotomy between those. We love plants, so we paint them! Goethe observed, “You really do not see a plant until you draw it.” The art and science of botanical illustration meld when we deeply observe and patiently, accurately, even lovingly, draw the tiniest details, for truth’s sake. In my early 20s I lived near the Palette and Chisel Academy of Fine Arts, knocked on their door and a little whitehaired man invited me to observe his class. I eventually became their second woman president. Where do you get your subjects? I feel blessed to have two tropical greenhouse retailers in our area: Orchids by Hausermann and Oak Hill Gardens (which specializes in unusual species), as well as permits to visit many nature preserves. I have been taught how to walk carefully in pristine sites, and I take lots of photos, work from herbarium specimens at the Field Museum, Morton Arboretum and the Chicago Botanic Garden, and make detailed sketches in my notebooks, especially for color. I try to paint as much in the field as I possibly can. What is your favorite medium? Watercolor, by far. It’s so versatile! What is interesting is how often people will comment on my work done on colored grounds, even more than my traditional botanicals. When I saw the amazing paintings by Albert R. Valentien at Chicago’s Field Museum, I was surprised by how his work just popped off the page and was so freshlooking! I’ve also been doing a lot of digital black and white images of regional plants to be used for field botany training. Do you enter juried shows? Yes, my Yellow Lady’s Slipper was accepted into ASBA’s Losing Paradise?, and other pieces have been in many non-ASBA exhibits over the years. But the primary focus of my work is natural areas education, as well as documenting our native threatened and endangered species By Robin A. Jess Spring Wildflowers of the Northeast A Natural History By Carol Gracie Princeton University Press, 2012 272 pp. full color. o not mistake this new natural history book for a field guide. This is a book filled with floragraphies – stories of a select group of 30 spring wildflowers that spoke to author/photographer Carol Gracie. Each chapter is based on a particular wildflower and weaves together natural history, botany, ecology, history and culture in a very readable text that is lavishly accompanied by Carol’s photographs. It’s a pretty book as well, from the velvety black cover to the colorcoordinated text panels, and the clean, crisply designed pages. Carol has tried to avoid overly scientific jargon, but the technical terms are there when necessary. The blend should appeal to a wide audience. For instance, in the chapter on Dutchman’s Breeches, there is a photo of ants carrying small, fatty elaiosomes (food bodies) back to their nests, which at the same time accomplishes the Dicentra’s goal of dispersing the black seeds that are attached to the elaiosomes. Technical and fascinating. The detail is very satisfying. We see a photo of a Trillium flower being visited by a bee – and we’re informed that it’s a native andrenid bee. It makes a difference to our understanding. The extensive section on violets shows quite a range of images, from close-ups of many hybrids, plants in situ, and examples from Virginia to French Guiana to Venezuela. There is a photo of a cleistogamous flower and one of crystallized violets decorating a cupcake. We are told of the ancient Greek myth of how the violet came to exist, Napoleon’s association with violets as well as that Rhinebeck, New York was once known as the Violet Capital of the World. It is this richness and combination of elements, enhanced by photographs that are a treat to the eye that make this a very special, enjoyable and informative book. D Paphiopedilum venustum, painted life size, about two months ago ©Kathleen Garness 2012 so that people will know they are worth the ongoing investment in their habitat. When do you paint? In addition to my stewardship and family responsibilities, I work full time [Kathleen started a Montessori preschool when her son was 3], so mostly after dinner a couple of nights a week. I have orchids on my windowsills crying out for their portraits to be done, but there never seems to be a convenient time. Having a show to paint for gives me a push in the right direction! I’m recovering right now from hanging two large concurrent solo exhibits, plus finishing up three new orchid paintings for our Illinois Orchid Society’s 60th Anniversary Gala show. Where do you paint? In my dining room at a small drawing board. My setup is very simple. Do you teach, and if so, what special aspect of botanical art? This year Suzanne Wegener at Morton Arboretum asked me to teach a botanical book arts class. I’ve been quite involved for several years with making my own hand-crafted books and recently produced a limited-edition volume of paintings of Illinois’ trilliums, with poems by Illinois Natural History Survey writer Susan L. Post. I’m also working with the Volo Bog Youth Art Guild this year, teaching them botanical drawing. What technique are you still trying to master? Watercolor. Refining and deepening my understanding of color, of glazes, being spontaneous and accurate at the same time. What one thing do you do that would surprise other artists? I’m given coordinates so I can visit rare and endangered plants using my GPS. I follow the protocol to cover myself in bug spray and then I go out and count the plants, identify any threats to them or their habitat: plants like the prairie white-fringed orchid, stemless pink lady’s slipper or the grass pink orchid. I am asked to speak on our findings. I’m no expert on native orchids but the experts call me for information! TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 13 Cobalt Blue By Carolyn Payzant I n March, I attended a symposium co-sponsored by University of Warwick, Victoria & Albert Museum, University of Istanbul and the Peabody Essex Museum entitled A Material World: The Art and Culture of Global Connections. This symposium is relevant because of their discussion of the history and use of one of the most expensive pigments in the world – cobalt blue. Cobalt blue is a cool blue used extensively by the Chinese when painting their lovely blue and white porcelain. What I found most interesting, is finding out that the Chinese had no native source for cobalt blue. Therefore, as early as the 9th century, they purchased the pigment from the Persians. This impure pigment traveled from Persia as raw material, the Chinese applied it to their blue and white porcelain, shipping finished products back to Persia – hence the very early blue tiles famous in the Middle East. By the 17th century Chinese porcelain was being exported to western European countries. In the 18th and This plate beautifully demonstrates the power of cobalt blue; c.1540-1550 Iznik dish in saz and 19th centuries, the Swedes rosette style–British Museum. Photographed by and French, not to be Marshall Colman. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Iznik_dish outdone by the Chinese, devised a chemical compound resembling cobalt. Their compound contained arsenic and sulfur! The points made at the symposium were several but most outstanding are: global trade is ongoing. There has always been international trade, each country has its own superior character and each tries to position not to be dependent on the other. We can understand this concept when we purchase pigments of different brands from different countries. Today, major deposits of cobalt can be found in Canada, Congo, New Grants Available to Members By Lee McCaffree D o you have an idea for a project? An exhibit, a brochure or an opportunity for teaching? Great or small? Local or distant? ASBA members can get assistance from an ASBA Artist and Education Grants. You may already be involved with a project that could benefit from additional funding. These grants are intended to benefit you, your target community and ASBA. ASBA helps fund members’ worthy projects, while they promote the name of ASBA and expand the reach of contemporary botanical art. These projects help ASBA fulfill our mission. ASBA offers up to four grants annually, depending on funds available and qualifications of applicants. 14 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 Caledonia, and in smaller amounts, Idaho. My choice of PB28 cobalt blue (watercolor) is made by M. Graham (US). I am sure that many of you use other brands such as Daniel Smith (US) similar to M. Graham but more textural, Daler-Rowney (UK) a steely hue, Sennelier (FR), Maimeri (IT), Schminke (GR), Holbein (JP), or last but never least Winsor & Newton (UK) the most muted (Comments are from observations of my samples). I found M. Graham less powdery, lightfast, and semitransparent; therefore, for my palette, a perfect middle blue pigment. It has a large drying shift, losing most of its luminosity. It is still one of the most beautiful versatile pigments: one cannot make as many multifaceted greens, violets or neutrals without it. Neutrals with Cobalt Blue lMix with one of its complimentary colors, PO62 Permanent Orange (DS), and create hues of burnt sienna, raw umber, and fawn grey. lMix with PO73 Pyrrol Orange (DS) and create hues from a slightly browner Venetian red to perylene maroon to perylene violet. lMix with PR176 Carmine (DS) and create a black with definite Carmine overtones. Green with Cobalt Blue lMix with PY3 Hansa Yellow Light (DS) and reach for early spring and summer greens. lMix with PY97 Hansa Yellow Medium (DS) and the green starts as acid hues but quickly turns to shades of handsome blue hosta leaves. lMix with PY65 Hansa Yellow Deep (DS) to create a richer hue of green gold all the way to a very saturated olive green and on to a molten gray. lMix with PY151 + PO62 Gamboges (MG) and gather in natural shades of green. Violets with Cobalt Blue lMix with PR209 Quinacridone Red (MG) and the violets are pinker. lMix with PR179 Carmine (DS) and the violets are velvety and more mysterious. lMix with PV19 Quinacridone Violet and create a gray/black with a smoky violet bias. lMix PV15 Mineral Violet (Holbein) and create a hue that hovers between violet/brown/blue – really mysterious. lMix PV37 Dioxazine Purple (MG) and see pansies and iris leap off your page. Lastly, please remember that all cobalt pigments are poisonous when ingested, so handle with care. Grants available are: $3,000 Julius I. Brown Award $3,000 Anne Ophelia Dowden Award $1,000 General Awards (up to two) The process of applying for a grant is simple – read the guidelines, complete the application (What is your project?) and the budget form (What will it cost and what is needed?). Send it with examples of your artwork to the committee for review. Find all guidelines and forms online at www.asbaart.org/about-asba/grants.If you have questions about your project or how to apply for a grant, please contact someone on the Artist and Education Grant Committee, chaired by Lee McCaffree ([email protected]) or call the ASBA office and speak with Robin Jess. We can help you focus your project to complete the application. Deadline is August 1, 2012. Welcome to Chic Chicago - Art, Science and All That Jazz! Register Now! “prairie style,”you won’t want to miss Frank Lloyd Wright’s Home and Studio in Oak Park. See his famed architecture and some of Wright’s original pencil drawings of midwestern wildflowers. All this, and you can still take a tour of a precious original prairie es, it’s time to sign up and select your workshops, tours and preserve at Somme Prairie Grove, just minutes away from CBG. Remember, many activities are included in your lectures at the 2012 ASBA Chicago Conference hosted by the registration/hotel fees. Breakfast and box lunches are provided Reed-Turner Artists’ Circle. This year, in an action-packed week, ASBA is the beneficiary of each day of the conference and the hotel has given us free in-room a collaboration with the Chicago Botanic Garden (CBG) in internet access. Thursday’s lovely lakeside General Membership presenting most of the conference activities. ASBA will be using Meeting and Luncheon, Saturday’s Silent Auction and Grand the facilities and grounds of one of America’s most distinguished Finale Awards Banquet and two receptions, the Small Works Exhibition will be displayed at the CBG and beautiful botanic gardens. Take October 10-19th and will be celebrated advantage of this unique opportunity to be at Thursday night with at a reception and the axis of art connecting science to people! awards ceremony. The Conference officially kicks-off on ow! Now, for the best likelihood of Wednesday evening October 17th with a getting into your first choice selections, gracious welcome reception in the Greenery atop go to www.asba-conf.org and register for the comfortable and friendly Renaissance Chic Chicago – Art, Science and All That Hotel, only a stone’s throw from the Jazz! Make your selections and register Gardens. ASAP to avoid disappointment. Come early for pre-conference workshops Register online at www.asba-conf.org. with Karen Kluglein or Alexander Viazmensky You’ll know right away if you are in the class and Dr. Gregory M. Mueller, or stay after the you desperately want! If it’s full, put yourself conference for a three-day workshop with Main Gate to Chicago Botanic Garden on the waiting list. That instant gratification Australia’s Beverly Allen. If you teach botanical art, stay for the Sunday Educator’s Forum lead by Sarah of knowing you got into the workshop is a great benefit to online registration. Make it work for you! Roche. Register by mail: be sure to make a first and second selection Each day you’ll be whisked away by a shuttle bus to the CBG. There, an incredible array of classes, workshop, lectures and for each time slot, i.e.:if your first choice on Friday is a full day presentations await you. For those who wish to get out and about, workshop, check that in the first choice column. If your second a variety of tours are scheduled. Visit the Morton Arboretum to see choice on Friday is two half-day workshops - a morning and an afternoon offering - check both of them as your second choice. Do their highly distinguished collection of original botanical art. If the Arts and Crafts movement fascinates you, choose the tour the same for all days. See the box below for all the details! of Ragdale and Crab Tree Farm. And if you are a devotee of the Y W Registration and Conference Policies Health emergency and/or death in the immediate family: Refunds will be same as above with the difference that if on or after October 13, a This is the only time the registration materials for the 18th ASBA Annual health emergency occurs to the registrant prohibiting their attendance, or a Meeting and Conference will appear in the Journal. Please note these death in their immediate family occurs on or after October 13, 50% of all Important Deadlines and Policies. fees will be refunded to the registrant. If any discrepancies exist between policies that appear in the Journal and ASBA reserves the right to cancel any workshop that does not meet a in the online Conference Registration Website (www.asba-conf.org) , the minimum registration and to replace an instructor in the event that an policies online will take precedence. instructor is unable to fulfill their obligation to teach. 1. Current ASBA membership is required for registration. 6. Marriott Renaissance Chicago North Shore Hotel reservations: See 2. The ASBA Annual Meeting and Conference is a three-day event. Partial the information on page 18 for details. Cancellation of hotel reservations registration is not available. Preference is given to conference registrants for is the responsibility of the registrant. pre- and post-conference workshops and activities. You must ask for the American Society of Botanical Artists Annual 3. Registration Fees: Registration fee on or before August 1, 2012, Save Meeting & Conference block to receive the Conference rate. The ASBA block $30, online or postmarked: room rate is good if booked by September 18, 2012. After that, the discount $360 for current members rate will no longer be available. If you stay somewhere other than this hotel, $445(US) and $460(non-US) for non-members joining ASBA at the same time ASBA is not responsible for your hotel arrangements nor transportation Registration fee after August 1, 2012 online or postmarked: from your hotel. $390 for current members Two Ways to Register for the Annual Meeting: $475(US) and $490(non-US) non-members joining at same time 1. Via website online: Register and pay with credit card (MC/Visa) at 4. Registration Deadline: Registration is closed as of September 18, www.asba-conf.org. Nearly 100% of registrants used the registration 2012. No registrations are accepted after this date. website last year. 5. Refund and Cancellation Policy: 2. By Mail: Clip, copy or download the registration form. Complete form General registration fees will be refunded less a $75 cancellation fee and mail along with your check (payable to ASBA) to: ASBA 18th Annual to those canceling on or before August 15, 2012. General registration fees Meeting, NYBG, 2900 Southern Blvd., Bronx, NY 10458-5126. will be refunded less a $150 cancellation fee to those canceling between First-come, first-served policy: Online registration/postmark date are August 16 and September 17, 2012. No refunds of general registration fee equal in terms of getting into workshops for the first week of registration. will be given for cancellations received on or after September 18, 2012. After that, online registration takes precedence. As always, register as soon Workshop fees may be refunded if your space is filled. Refunds 60 days or as you decide to attend. That is the best way to get what you want. more after the initial registration online will be subject to an additional Confirmation: Sent via email only to those registering online. and by US cancellation fee of $25. Postal Service to those registering by mail. Pre- and Post-Conference Workshop fees will be refunded less $200 Questions: Regarding selection of classes, email [email protected] if cancelled on or before September 1, 2012. Cancellations on or after or regarding a change in your registration, email: [email protected] September 2 will not be refunded unless your space is filled. If your space From top: Al fresco dining at the Renaissance Hotel;the theASBA tour trolly at at 1.866.691.9080. is filled, you will be refunded 50% of your fee. or contact office Morton Arboretum; entrance to the Chicago Botanical Gardens TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 15 Pre- And Post- Conference Activities October 16 & 17, 2012 9 AM-4 PM Workshop The Art & Science of Mushrooms– Alexander Viazmensky, Dr. Gregory T. Mueller Hunting mushrooms is a national pastime in Russia. For Alexander Viazmensky mushrooms are the main subject of his botanical art. However his technique can be used for vegetables, fruits and other botanical subjects as well. The artistic part of the class will start with the general demonstration of Alexander’s techniques for the whole group. During the class Alexander will do many demonstrations and work individually with everyone. Greg has long been fascinated by mushrooms: their colors and forms, where and when they fruit, their critical role in the environment, and how humans relate to them are topics that he has explored for nearly 30 years. He will help the class learn the key diagnostic characters to note when illustrating and identifying mushrooms and where and when to find mushrooms. Limit 15, Fee $300 October 16 & 17, 2012 9 AM–4 PM Workshop Creating Translucent Roses in Watercolor- Karen Kluglein A rose is not always just a rose. In this class we will learn how to create translucent rose petals using watercolor. We will experiment with light and a variety of colored blossoms using a delicate touch to create some botanical magic. Includes $10 materials. Limit 15, Fee: $310 October 21, 2012 9 AM–3 PM Educator’s Forum Renaissance Hotel Join Sarah Roche along with your fellow botanical art teachers in an exciting day of programs that include speakers Helen Allen, Susan T. Fisher, Tania Marien, Deborah Shaw and Dr. Ruth Starratt. Take the opportunity to share ideas, make new contacts and friends in this event designed just for teachers.See complete info on Page 18. Limit 60, Fee: $60 October 21, 22, 23 9 AM–4 PM Workshop: An Insight into my Watercolor Technique– Beverly Allen Known for her dramatic, large, yet exquisitely detailed paintings, Beverly Allen comes from Australia to share the elements that make her work so successful. Take advantage of this rare opportunity to learn how drawing techniques, light and shade, composition and perspective all contribute to beautiful botanical art. Techniques from initial washes through dry brush finishing will be demonstrated and individual instruction given. Beverly will guide the class through mixing and layering of color (primarily using a six-color palette), translating color into tone and developing a composition to create a painting that is both accurate botanically and aesthetically compelling Limit 15, Fee: $450 Conference Activities Wednesday, October 17 8 AM-4 PM: Board of Directors Meeting, Renaissance Hotel 8 AM-8 PM: Small Works Exhibition: Chicago’s Top Twelve, Chicago Botanic Garden 2-5:30 PM: Registration, Renaissance Hotel 5:30-7:30 PM: Welcome Reception, Renaissance Hotel, wine and hors d’oeuvres The Reed-Turner Artists’ Circle is anxious to welcome everyone to the ASBA Chicago Conference for a little art, science and all that jazz with classes and lectures featuring how art connects science to people. Please join us in the Greenery Room. It’s location on the top floor provides expansive views looking east toward the Chicago Botanic Garden and south toward the beautiful Chicago Skyline. Meet the friends you only see once a year and make plans to socialize with them during the ASBA 2012 Chicago Conference. 7-9 PM: Committee Meetings, Renaissance Hotel 7-9 PM: Chapter and Artists’ Circle Meeting, Renaissance Hotel: The president or representative of each Chapter and Circle are invited to join Terry Ruiter, Chapter and Artist’s Circle Liaison, and Martha Kemp, ASBA Membership chair, for an informal exchange of information about the activities of their groups. Thursday, October 18 6:30-8 AM: Breakfast, Renaissance Hotel 7 AM-8 PM: Bus shuttle between Renaissance Hotel and Chicago Botanic Garden 8 AM-8 PM: Small Works Exhibition: Chicago’s Top Twelve, Chicago Botanic Garden 8AM-4 PM: Registration, Renaissance Hotel 8:30-11 AM: Portfolio Sharing Display your portfolio or view those of other ASBA artists–share ideas and camaraderie. On a first-come basis, artists who sign up to display their work will be given table space as space permits. Open to all, 16 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 beginners to advanced. You must register to share your portfolio (see check off box on registration form). Limit 32 10-11:30 AM: The Botanical Art Market: Tips for a Career as a Botanical Artist, Susan Frei Nathan and Kate Nessler How does the Botanical Artist achieve success in this field? Susan and Kate will offer tips, suggestions and ideas from the viewpoint of the Dealer and the Artist. Together we will work to understand what you need to think about and do to further your career. Limit 100. 10-11 AM: The Highgrove Florilegium, Leora Siegel The Highgrove Florilegium, commissioned by His Royal Highness, The Prince of Wales, was published in 2008 as an official chronicle of the plants growing in his garden at Highgrove. In this two-volume set, leading botanical artists depict plants of this sustainable garden. With each illustration signed by the artist, and only 175 numbered sets created, enjoy the opportunity to examine this magnificent work up close. Limit 15. 10:45-11:30 AM: Chicago Botanic Garden Tram Tour See the Chicago Botanic Garden and learn all the facts on a 35-minute narrated Grand Tram Tour around the perimeter of the Garden. Enjoy spectacular overviews of all areas of the 385-acres with 24 display gardens and four natural areas, uniquely situated on nine islands surrounded by lakes. Limit 75, Fee: $5 11:30 AM-1PM: General Membership Meeting and Luncheon Welcome from Sophia Siskel, President and CEO of the CBG 1:15-4:15 PM: Techniques Showcase on Stage Moderator Marilyn Garber Four artists demonstrate and discuss on stage with close-ups of their techniques projected onto a large screen. 1:15 PM: Pen & Ink Techniques, Francesca Anderson, Derek Norman; 2:15 PM: Watercolor Techniques, Beverly Allen; 3:15 PM: Watercolor and Gold Leaf on Vellum, Carol Jean Rogalski. Limit 100. 1:15-4:15 PM: Gouache on Dark Backgrounds, Suzanne Wegener Gouache is a flexible, opaque water-based medium which has been used in botanical art for centuries. It works well on both light and dark backgrounds. Learn how to work with under painting and drybrush to create a mini-painting on a dark ground. In the interest of time backgrounds will be prepared for you. All supplies will be provided. Includes $20 materials. Limit 15, Fee: $70 1:15-4:15 PM: Wild Cucumbers in Graphite, Bruce Wilson The Wild Cucumber is a climbing vine with long twisting tendrils and the oval fruit is covered with distinctive soft spines. It makes a perfect subject for graphite. In this class you will hone your skills in creating form, desiccated textures, and spines. Limit 15, Fee: $50 1:15-4:15 PM: Five Things A Botanical Art Teacher Won’t Tell You About Color, Susan T. Fisher Spend three hours de-mystifying color. Get the lowdown on what works and what doesn’t. Bring your favorite colors and find out how to use them effectively. Try some easy exercises that will give you color confidence. Get in the mix, explore your options and have fun. You can do this. Beginners are welcome. Limit 15, Fee: $50 2-3:30 PM: Dixon Prairie Tour, David Sollenburger Take an autumn walk in Dixon Prairie, a 15-acre re-creation of six distinct prairie ecosystems that contain more than 300 plant species. Limit 20. 2-4 PM: Importance of Scanning your Artwork, Tricia Peterson, Carol Woodin What is resolution? What does it matter? RGB, CMYK, grey scale or duotone? What’s the difference and why do I need to know? The digital translation of your original work can determine the success of your prints, giclees, publications or website. Good scans appear crisp, accurate in color, and indicate that you are a professional. Using examples of scans submitted to ASBA exhibitions, you’ll learn to make a scan that’s “in spec” an give the best possible representation of your work for a juror’s consideration. Limit 15. 4:30-5:30 PM: Beyond Accuracy–Creating Art, Panel Discussion, Kate Nessler, Robin Jess, Carol Woodin, moderated by Marilyn Garber Botanical artists straddle two worlds - one of accuracy in portraying plants and the other of creating art. How can we combine these two without sacrificing one for the other? This illustrated discussion considers the concept of moving beyond mere accurate images into art. Work by many artists will be shown and there will be time for audience questions. Limit 200. 5:30-7:30 PM: Small Works Exhibition Reception & Awards, Complimentary Wine and Hors d’oeuvres Celebrate this exhibition and your work with artists and guests. Artist’s Choice Award which your vote will decide, and the ASBA Anne Marie Carney Award for an artist in a nonjuried exhibition who has not been accepted in an ASBA Juried Exhibition, will be presented. (To submit a work to this exhibition, please see the Call for Entries section.) 7-8 PM: Buses depart from Chicago Botanic Garden to Renaissance Hotel Friday, Octob 6:30-8 AM: Breakfast, Renaissa 8 AM-6 PM: Bus shuttle bet Chicago Botanic Garden 8 AM-8 PM: Small Works Exhib 8 AM-1 PM: Bus Trip to Arts & Crab Tree Farms Visit two iconic symbols of the on Chicago’s North Shore, each heritage. Ragdale remains a cr artists retreat, and the storybo Mr. & Mrs. John H. Bryan Arts Fee: $75 8 AM-5 PM: Bus Trip to Morto The Morton Arboretum tour in Library Tours. Box Lunch inclu Davidson Special Collection of you will see a historical overvie Barbara Deitzch, G. Ehret, and Sterling Morton Library– Rita Morton Arboretum Tram Tour Herbarium Tour–Dr. Andrew H Limit 45, Fee: $75 9 AM-12 PM: Designing Produ Artwork Using Photoshop, We Hotel Using Photoshop and a high re students will get an overview of cards, fabric patches, silk sc prints, business cards, adding and adding borders. Student skills. Please bring your lapto scans of your artwork in the c recommended) Limit 15, Fee: $ 9 AM-4 PM: Drawing on Black Rhonda Nass, Renaissance Ho With a precision pencil point an which reduces colored pencil w accompanying wax), we will cre black (or very dark colored) p AND be thrilled with a final pr Limit 15, Fee: $140 9 AM-4 PM: Textures in Water Renaissance Hotel Learn how to paint effective watercolor. Beginning with ex several small studies of differe shiny to fuzzy and hairy. St masking fluid and will learn to mi in creating texture. Includes $5 m 9 AM-4 PM: Painting Vegetabl Bumps, Asuka Hishiki Asuka Hishiki will share her inc to create masterworks out masking fluid, you will learn ho vegetables–turning seemingly unique signature of your subjec 15, Fee: $140 9 AM-4 PM: A Marriage of Art Catherine Watters The harmony of an artistic c accuracy of a subject make a su will learn the key elements examining several masterful co your own using a variety of plan 9 AM-4 PM: Colored Pencil Ch It seems like magic, but it’s r variety of colored pencil media key methods for creating visual exacting detail, and special e exciting exercises and demos. L 9 AM-4 PM: Painting Dried Fall S Gastinger Observe and paint architectur other fall specimens with contro a palette of sepia tones you will form and texture while crea painting. Limit 15, Fee: $135 9 AM-4 PM: Gourds in Waterc Gourds, often associated with t colors, covered with bumps, consider how the application of s to the solid body of the gourd th small but beautifully painted ima 12-2:30 PM: Vellum Sales Renaissance Hotel 1-4 PM: Prairie Sedges and Grass Dried native Midwest grasses ber 19, 2012 ance Hotel tween Renaissance Hotel and bition, Chicago Botanic Garden & Crafts Tour - Ragdale and e Arts & Crafts tradition found with a rich artistic and cultural reative center as a writers and ok Crab Tree Farm houses the s & Crafts collection. Limit 30, on Arboretum Tour ncludes Tram, Herbarium, and uded. At the Suzette Morton the Sterling Morton Library ew of Botanical Art including d more. a Hassert, Arlene Widrivitch and Lecture–Ed Hedborn Hipp ucts from Your Botanical endy Hollender, Renaissance esolution scan of their artwork, creating products such as note carves, wrapping paper, giclee g text, removing backgrounds ts must have basic computer op with Photoshop along with computer. (Not mandatory, but $50 k with Colored Pencil, otel nd a custom application stroke wax (and non-archival “sheen” eate detail and color drama on paper. Luxuriate in the process roduct. Includes $5 materials. rcolor, Denise Walser-Kolar, e and realistic texture using xercises in observation paint ent textures - from smooth and tudents will experiment with ix very dark shadow colors to use materials. Limit 15, Fee: $140 es with Beautiful Scars and credible award-winning abilities of mundane subjects. Using ow to build the key elements of unappealing scars into the ct. Includes $5 materials. Limit & Science in Watercolor, omposition and the scientific uccessful botanical painting. You to create this harmony by ompositions and then designing nt materials. Limit 15, Fee: $135 hemistry, Libby Kyer really chemistry! Work with a (oil, wax, pastel) to experience , physical and chemical mixing, effects. Grow your skills with Limit 15, Fee: $135 Specimens in Sepia, Lara rally exquisite nuts, pods, and ol and attention to detail. Using l focus on accurately rendering ating a lovely monochromatic olor, Helen Allen the Fall, are gleaming with rich ridges and patterns. We shall surface texture works in relation hrough quick tonal drawings to a age. Limit 15, Fee: $135 s, Jesse Meyer, Pergamena, ses in Watercolor, Ann Tompkins and sedges can be simple or complex whose beauty is often overlooked. Learn to appreciate their intricate design through careful study. From your sketches a small watercolor painting will be created with emphasis on high, value contrast to enhance detail. Limit 15, Fee: $50 1-4 PM: Five Things A Botanical Art Teacher Won’t Tell You About Color, Susan T. Fisher, Renaissance Hotel Spend three hours de-mystifying color. Get the lowdown on what works and what doesn’t. Bring your favorite colors and find out how to use them effectively. Try some easy exercises that will give you color confidence. Get in the mix, explore your options and have fun. You can do this. Beginners are welcome. Limit 15, Fee: $50 2-3 PM: 17th and 18th Century Black and White Drawings and Engravings, Leora Siegel Examine a selection of black and white engravings from the rare book collection of the Lenhardt Library of the Chicago Botanic Garden. From scientifically accurate botanical illustrations to vast landscape scenes, take advantage of this unique opportunity to view volumes of exceptional works of art published prior to 1900. Limit 15. 4-6 PM: Vellum Sales, Jesse Meyer, Pergamena, Renaissance Hotel 5-6:15 PM: Grant Recipient Awards, Renaissance Hotel Join the 2011 ASBA Artist and Education Grant recipients as they present their exciting projects. Each artist will give a presentation about how they used their skills to help others learn about nature, botanical art and themselves. Share in their enthusiasm and get inspired to apply for a grant yourself. Moderator: Lee McCaffree. Limit 100. 6:30-7:30 PM: Wildflower Forum, Paleobotany: Past, Present & Future, Dr. Patrick Herendeen, Light Refreshments and Cash Bar, Renaissance Hotel For most of us “paleobotany” is one of those subjects about which we know all too little. Yet it is key to unlocking so many of the mysteries of the plant world. And it’s fundamental to the study of green plant development and evolution. But that’s only half of it - Dr. Pat Herendeen will offer the full fascinating story. Limit 150. Saturday, October 20, 2012 6:30-8 AM: Breakfast, Renaissance Hotel 6:30-8 AM: Small Works exhibitors pick up your art work at the Renaissance Hotel 8 AM-6 PM: Bus shuttle between Renaissance Hotel and Chicago Botanic Garden 8 AM-1 PM: Bus Trip to Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio, Oak Park Wright’s Prairie style of architecture found its earliest expression here in his own home and studio. Familiarize yourself with the early Frank Lloyd Wright. Enjoy a rare opportunity to view some of his original pencil drawings and photographs of native wildflowers. Limit 30: Fee $75 9 AM-10:30 AM: Wildflower Forum, Rare & Endangered Plants, Dr. Jeremie Fant Dr. Fant will discuss the subject of Rare & Endangered Species - ethics, philosophy, research, loss of habitat, global warming - and research that is being conducted on this subject by the Chicago Botanic Garden. Limit 100. 9 AM-12 PM: Juror Training, Carol Woodin A review of the topics needed to serve as a juror in ASBA exhibitions, including ASBA policies and procedures for jurors and criteria used in scoring artwork. Participants will divide into teams and jury a small exhibition. Limit 15. 9 AM-4 PM: Back to the Basics: Pencil Drawing, Heeyoung Kim Have you ever considered the mechanics of how you use your pencil –how fast you move it, how much it weighs, how long it is? RHS gold medalist Heeyoung will provide a fresh look at pencil drawing techniques. Reassess and rediscover the beauty of pencil – remember the basics make the difference! Limit 15, Fee: $135 9 AM-4 PM: The Botany of Botanical Art–Flowers, Mary Bauschelt Scientific accuracy in your artistic depiction of plants is a very important part of botanical art. Learn by dissecting, observing and drawing flower parts using microscopes. In this botany class you will study flowers and inflorescences. Includes $15 dissecting kit and materials. Limit 15, Fee: $150 9 AM-4 PM: Drawing in Carbon Dust, Marlene Hill Donnelly Carbon Dust is a wonderful medium for expressing volume, strength and depth as well as fine detail. In this workshop we’ll combine several forms of carbon dust applied with different brushes and enhanced with graphite pencils, to achieve maximum impact for the subject. Includes $8 materials. Limit 15 Fee: $143 9 AM-4 PM: Vellum in Seven Hours, Kate Nessler, Renaissance Hotel Learn about vellum by composing and painting dried fall specimens on the warm and expressive Honey Vellum. Learn new techniques, expand skills and gain a strong foundation for exploring the beauty of painting on this remarkable surface. Includes $47 for vellum. Limit 15, Fee: $182 9 AM-4 PM: Get it Right from the Start, Shapes & Foreshortening, Lee McCaffree, Renaissance Hotel Your masterpiece-get it right from the start by using basic shapes to understand and draw plants -simple or complex. The class will include pencil exercises drawing plant materials using shapes. By adapting these shapes to foreshortening, the resulting three dimensionality will make your work come to life. Includes $6 materials. Limit 15, Fee: $141 9 AM-4 PM: Orchids in Watercolor or Graphite, Kathy Creger Orchids are one of the oldest plant families on earth yet they are constantly evolving. Orchids also have some of the most complex and diverse forms to entice their pollinators. We will explore the morphology of these unique flowers in watercolor or graphite to better understand them. Includes $8 materials. Limit 15, Fee: $143 9 AM-4 PM: Botanical Scientific Illustration, Alice Tangerini Learn the methods of producing a quality illustration for publication in a botanical journal using pressed plants similar to specimens found in herbaria. Accompanying printed digital images and, if available, living material will provide additional reference. Techniques using traceable surfaces with ink and pen and brush media will be demonstrated. Includes $11 materials. Limit 15, Fee: $146 9 AM-4 PM: Open your Eyes to Nature, Hillary Parker Through keen observation and unique drawing techniques, students gain the ability to absorb and assimilate both general and specific information in nature with scientific accuracy. By integrating these valuable skills in their approach to observation, students are freed from the crutch of always needing the subject in front of them in order to know it thoroughly. Intermediate drawing skills recommended. Limit 15, Fee: $135 9 AM-4 PM: Colored Pencil on Mylar, Kathie Miranda, Renaissance Hotel Mylar offers endless possibilities for experimentation. Due to its translucency, colored pencil work has a special brilliance, depth and luminosity unattainable on other surfaces. Explore how to adapt your usual working methods to achieve a variety of stunning effects. The exciting thing about working with Mylar is…there are no rules! Includes $6 materials. Limit 15, Fee: $141 10:30 AM-12 PM: Wildflower Forum, Science Center Tour, Dr. Gregory T. Mueller Greg will give a behind the scene tour of the new Daniel F. and Ada L. Rice Plant Conservation Science Center. It houses sophisticated laboratories for research and training in a wide array of plant science disciplines. Visit one of the largest green roofs in the region, into the Dixon National Tall Grass Prairie Seed Lab and Vault, and through the conservation genetics lab (think CSI for plants). In addition to being a center for research, conservation efforts, and training, the Rice Science Center is a terrific example of how a building can blend beauty and functionality with sustainability. It has been awarded Gold LEED status by the U.S. Green Building Council. Limit 25. 11 AM-12 PM: The Temple of Flora, Leora Siegel Thirty-one botanical and allegorical illustrations comprise Robert John Thornton’s exquisite Florilegium: the Temple of Flora. They were published between 1799–1812 in aquatint and mezzotint plates created by premier artists and engravers of the time, and accompanied by flowing poetic verse. Enjoy the opportunity to study this special volume in person. Limit 15. 11 AM-4 PM: Vellum Sales, Jesse Meyer, Pergamena, Renaissance Hotel 1-3:30 PM: Bus Trip to Tall Grass Prairie, Somme Prairie, Stephen Packard Little remains of the unbroken prairie encountered by the early settlers of the Midwest. Join Stephen Packard, founding Director of the Chicago area programs of the National Audubon Society (Audubon Chicago Region) for a tour of the Tall Grass Somme Prairie and see a remnant of this iconic landscape. Bus departs from Renaissance Hotel. Limit 35, Fee: $15 2-4 PM: Exhibiting at the UK Royal Horticultural Society, Victoria Matthews, Helen Allen The Royal Horticultural Society Botanical Art Show is held annually in London, UK. Victoria Matthews and Helen Allen will guide you through the history of the shows and the process of application for exhibitors. Tips on going for gold at these prestigious shows will dispel some of the myths and anxieties potential exhibitors anticipate. Limit 100 5-7 PM: Silent Auction, Hors d’oeuvres and Cash Bar, Renaissance Hotel Have fun bidding on great items, like original artwork, art supplies, note cards and more, to support ASBA’s Artist and Education Grants and The Botanical Artist. New this year: Buy a chance to win an outstanding piece of art for a fraction of its value. 7:15-8 PM: Silent Auction Purchasing, pay for the bids you have won, before dining. 8-9:30 PM: ASBA’s Annual Awards Banquet, Renaissance Hotel Enjoy a relaxing dinner with friends new and old as we honor members’ achievements at the Grand Finale of ASBA’s conference activities. TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 17 Lodging Sunday, October 21 Educators’ Forum Moderated by Sarah Roche 9 AM–3 PM, Renaissance Hotel t this year’s expanded Educators’ Forum, you will find an exciting program of speakers and round table discussions which are a must for any Botanical Art Educator! Take the opportunity to share ideas, make new contacts and friends in this event designed just for teachers. Presenters: Helen Allen, Course Director of the Diploma Course in Botanical Illustration and Painting at the English Gardening School Susan T. Fisher, former Director of the Art Institute at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum and the former program coordinator of the Certificate Program in Botanical Art and Illustration at Denver Botanic Gardens Tania Marien, Founder of ArtPlantae Deborah Shaw, Principal of db Shaw Studios, an award-winning design firm Dr. Ruth Starratt, Professor of Art Education at Boston University Sarah Roche, Education Chair of the ASBA, Education Director for the Wellesley College Botanical Garden’s Certificate in Botanical Art and Illustration program Schedule: 9–9:10 PM: Welcome and Introductions, Sarah Roche, ASBA Education Committee Chair 9:10–9:40 PM: Interdisciplinary Connections - Integrating Botanical Art in the Classroom, Dr. Ruth Starratt Dr. Starratt’s joy in “teaching teachers” will shine as she explains how students, through the lens of botanical art, can be challenged to apply seemingly unrelated information from other disciplines in interesting and engaging ways. In this time of declining arts opportunities in schools, it is important to realize that engaging students in the arts has positive influence on self-concept and academic success. Throughout history the arts have provided aesthetic records of social, economic and environmental trends. Dr. Starratt will give insight into innovative ways artful principles and behavior can be linked to properties of science, mathematics and sociology. 9:40–10:40 PM: Round Table Breakouts: Based on questions raised in Dr. Starratt’s presentation, round table brainstorming sessions will be led by: Dr. Faith Clover, Jeanne Debons, Marcia DeWitt, Patricia Schmidt, Donna Torres, and Dr. Mary Jane Zander. 10:40–11:45 PM: Round Table Reports: Each round table group leader will share ideas developed in their discussions. 11:45–12:30 PM: Box Lunches Served 12:30–1 PM: Making Connections, Tania Marien of ArtPlantae An introduction to reaching out to new audiences using the Internet: the pros, the cons and the hazards. Tania’s comprehensive website has wide appeal and presents a wealth of knowledge on a broad range of botanical art topics. 1–1:30 PM: Technology in the Classroom, Deb Shaw The omnipresence of technology in the digital age has changed the classroom, the way we teach and the way our students learn. Deb will provide an overview of available technology, its benefits and pitfalls, plus a reference hand-out and a list of fun apps. 1:30–2 PM: English Botanical Art Programs, Helen Allen Botanical art programs in England are varied in style and content and thus every aspiring student will find a program that is right for them. Helen will share her views on how we can best serve the art, the science and the student. 2–2:30 PM: North American Botanical Art Programs, Susan T. Fisher Botanical art programs in the US: How our approach to learning is affected by the digital age, the traditions that preceded us, and a combination of science and art courses that varies across institutions. 2:30–3 PM: Questions, complete Ed Forum evaluation forms, and Wrap-Up of activities. Forum participation Limit 60, Fee: $60, includes box lunch. Sign up for the Educator’s Forum online or in the registration form included in this Journal. A 18 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 C onveniently located near the Chicago Botanic Garden, this Marriott hotel makes our stay very affordable by its great room rate, which includes hot breakfast each day at no extra charge and free in-room internet. Marriott’s Renaissance Chicago North Shore Hotel 933 Skokie Boulevard Northbrook, IL 60062 nRoom rates: $109/night plus applicable taxes. This ASBA block rate will be available through September 22. After that rooms will be offered at the prevailing rate. For reservations and conference rate: n In all cases use the group code: ab2ab2a n Call: The Renaissance toll free number: 1.800.468.3571 n Book on line: Marriott.com web page, select Northbrook as the location, then select the Renaissance Chicago North Shore, check availability by typing in the required dates, select the group code option, enter the code. n Email: [email protected]. Norma Batiz: Conference Service Manager Conference Roommate Coordinator: Elisabeth de Boor: [email protected] Transportation The main airport for this region is Chicago O’Hare American Taxi - www.americantaxi.com 303 Taxi - www.303taxi.com/index.aspx Entry Fees The Chicago Botanic Garden & The Morton Arboretum: If you drive yourself to the Garden or Arboretum, rather than take provided transportation, you will pay their entry fee, unless you are a member of a botanic garden with reciprocal agreements. Visit: www.ahs.org/events/reciprocal/index.html for a listing of all participating gardens. Registration Form ASBA 18th Annual Meeting & Conference 2012 Member Name:__________________________________________________________________qI teach botanical art qThis is my first ASBA conference Address:______________________________________________________City:________________________________________State:_____Zip: ______________ Ph: ____________________________________________________ E-mail:__________________________________________________________________________ Day/Time Activity Pre- and Post- Conference Activities October 16 & 17 9 AM-4 PM Workshop: The Art & Science of Mushrooms–Viazmensky, Mueller October 16 & 17 9 AM–4 PM Workshop: Creating Translucent Rose Petals in Watercolor, K. Kluglein $10 Materials October 21 9 AM–3 PM Educators’ Forum, Renaissance Hotel (includes box lunch) October 21, 22, 23 9 AM–4 PM Workshop: An Insight into my Watercolor Technique–B. Allen Limit Fee 1st 2nd Choice Choice 15 $300 15 $310 60 $60 15 $450 200 $0 32 100 15 75 100 15 15 15 20 25 200 $0 $0 $0 $5 $0 $70 $50 $50 $0 $0 $0 30 45 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 100 150 $75 $75 $50 $140 $140 $140 $135 $135 $135 $135 $50 $50 $0 $0 $0 35 100 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 25 15 35 100 $75 $0 $0 $135 $150 $143 $182 $141 $143 $146 $135 $141 $0 $0 $15 $0 Amount Wednesday, October 17 5:30-7:30 PM: Welcome Reception, Renaissance Hotel (RH) Thursday, October 18 8:30-11 AM: Portfolio Sharing qMust check here to display a portfolio 10-11:30 AM: The Botanical Art Market: Tips for a Career–Frei Nathan, Nessler 10-11 AM: The Highgrove Florilegium–Leora Siegel 10:45-11:30 AM: Chicago Botanic Garden Tram Tour 1:15-4:15 PM: Techniques Showcase–Anderson, Norman, B. Allen, Rogalski 1:15-4:15 PM: Gouache on Dark Backgrounds–Wegener 1:15-4:15 PM: Wild Cucumbers in Graphite–Wilson 1:15-4:15 PM: 5 Things A Botanical Art Teacher Won’t Tell You About Color–Fisher 2-3:30 PM: Dixon Prairie Tour–Sollenburger 2-4 PM: Importance of Scanning Your Artwork–Peterson, Woodin 4:30-5:30 PM: Beyond Accuracy–Creating Art–Nessler, Jess, Woodin Friday, October 19 8 AM-1 PM: Arts & Crafts Trip–Ragdale and Crab Tree Farms 8 AM-5 PM: Morton Arboretum Trip 9 AM-12 PM: Designing Botanical Products Using Photoshop–Hollender (RH) 9 AM-4 PM: Drawing on Black with Colored Pencil–Nas (RH) 9 AM-4 PM: Textures in Watercolor–Walser Kolar (RH) 9 AM-4 PM: Painting Vegetables–Hishiki 9 AM-4 PM: A Marriage of Art & Science (Watercolor)–Watters 9 AM-4 PM: Colored Pencil Chemistry–Kyer 9 AM-4 PM: Painting Dried Fall Specimens in Sepia–Gastinger 9 AM-4 PM: Gourds in Watercolor–H. Allen 1-4 PM: Prairie Sedges and Grasses in Watercolor–Tompkins 1-4 PM: 5 Things A Botanical Art Teacher Won’t Tell You About Color–Fisher (RH) 2-3 PM: 17th and 18th Century Black and White Drawings and Engravings–Siegel 5-6:15 PM: Grant Recipient Awards, Renaissance Hotel–McCaffree 6:30-7:30 PM: Wildflower Forum, Paleobotany for Today–Herendeen (RH) Saturday, October 20 8 AM-1 PM: Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio Trip 9 AM-10:30 AM: Wildflower Forum, Rare & Endangered Plants–Fant 9 AM-12 PM: Juror Training–Woodin 9 AM-4 PM: Back to the Basics: Pencil Drawing–Kim 9 AM-4PM: The Botany of Botanical Art–Flowers–Bauschelt 9 AM-4 PM: Drawing in Carbon Dust–Donnelly 9 AM-4 PM: Vellum in Seven–Nessler (RH) 9 AM-4 PM: Get it Right, Shapes & Foreshortening–McCaffree (RH) 9 AM-4 PM: Orchids in Watercolor or Graphite–Creger 9 AM-4 PM: Botanical Scientific Illustration–Tangerini 9 AM-4 PM: Open your Eyes to Nature–Parker 9 AM-4 PM: Colored Pencil on Mylar–Miranda (RH) 10:30 AM-12 PM: Wildflower Forum, Science Center Tour–Mueller 11 AM-12 PM: The Temple of Flora–Siegel 1-3:30 PM: Bus Trip to Tall Grass Prairie, Somme Prairie–Packard 2-4 PM: Exhibiting at the UK Royal Horticultural Society–V. Matthews, H. Allen (PLEASE TOTAL AND ADD AMOUNT INTO TOTAL REGISTRATION FEE AT BOTTOM OF NEXT PAGE) WORKSHOPS TOTAL: TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 19 Your Menu Selections—Costs Included in Your Registration Wednesday qI will attend the Welcome Reception Thursday qI will attend the General Meeting & Luncheon Select One: qHerb Crusted Chicken Breast with organic wild rice, baby vegetable ragout, brandy thyme jus, caesar salad, dessert qRoasted Vegetable and Fresh Mozzarella Tian, couscous, red pepper coulis, dessert qI will attend the Small Works Reception, complimentary wine and refreshments Friday Select One: qReserve a box lunch for workshops at the Chicago Botanic Garden -OR- qReserve a box lunch for the Morton Arboretum trip Select One: qGrilled Portobello Mushroom with red pepper hummus on sun dried tomato foccacia qGrilled Flank Steak with horseradish mayo, red onion confit, watercress on Tuscan roll qLemon Tarragon Chicken Salad, lettuce and tomato on sourdough ciabatta qReserve a box lunch for the Arts & Crafts Trip -OR- qReserve a box lunch for a class at the Renaissance Hotel Select One: qTurkey Club Sandwich with pesto mayo, tomato, bacon, swiss cheese on sourdough bread qAmerican Wrap with ham, American cheese, bibb lettuce, tomato, ranch dressing, spinach tortilla wrap qRoast Beef with Boursin cheese spread, tomato, bacon, lettuce, horseradish, foccacia bread qGarlic Tuna Salad, olive oil, tomato, lettuce on whole wheat roll qI will attend the Wildflower Forum at the Renaissance Hotel, light refreshments, cash bar Saturday qReserve a box lunch at the Chicago Botanic Garden. Select One: qBrie, cucumber, radish and baby spinach, croissant with rosemary aioli qHerbed Roasted Turkey Breast, swiss, lettuce, tomato & Dijonaisse on herbed foccacia qBeef and Bleu Cheese Wrap OR Select One: If you are attending the qFrank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio Trip -OR-for a class at the Renaissance Hotel . Select One: qTurkey Club Sandwich with pesto mayo, tomato, baton, swiss cheese on sourdough bread qAmerican Wrap with ham, American cheese, bibb lettuce, tomato, ranch dressing, spinach tortilla wrap qRoast Beef Boursin with Boursin cheese spread, tomato, bacon, lettuce, horseradish, foccacia bread qGarlic Tuna Salad, olive oil, tomato, lettuce on whole wheat roll qI will attend the Silent Auction and Annual Banquet. Includes fresh garden greens salad, vegetable and cheesecake. Select One: qChicken Cilantro Infusion, marinated grilled chicken, sundried tomato Cilantro Infusion qBaked Tilapia with lemon pepper, julienne leeks, garnished with lemon wedge qEggplant Parmesan, lightly breaded eggplant, marinara sauce, mozzarella cheese Sunday — Educator’s Forum qReserve a box lunch for the Educators’ Forum Select One: qTurkey Club Sandwich with pesto mayo, tomato, bacon, swiss cheese on sourdough bread qAmerican Wrap with ham, American cheese, bibb lettuce, tomato, ranch dressing, spinach tortilla wrap qRoast Beef with Boursin cheese spread, tomato, bacon, lettuce, horseradish, foccacia bread qGarlic Tuna Salad, olive oil, tomato, lettuce on whole wheat roll Guest Registration Form If you are bringing a guest, please complete this form for each guest attending with you. Include your Guest Dining and Trips Total in the Total Registration Fee below. You may copy this form for additional guest information. Guest’s Name:_____________________________________________________Name of Member Bringing Guest: ______________________________________ Activities Cost Amount Thursday: qChicago Botanic Garden Tram Tour Thursday: qI will attend the Small Works Reception Friday: qArts & Crafts Trip – Ragdale and Crab Tree Farms Friday: qMorton Arboretum Trip Saturday: qFrank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio Trip $5 $24 $75 $75 $75 Menu Selections Wednesday qI will attend the Welcome Reception $30 Thursday qI will attend the General Meeting & Luncheon $62 Select One: qHerb Crusted Chicken Breast with organic wild rice, baby vegetable ragout, brandy thyme jus, caesar salad, dessert qRoasted Vegetable and Fresh Mozzarella Tian, couscous, red pepper coulis, dessert Friday qReserve a box lunch at the Chicago Botanic Garden -OR- qReserve a box lunch for the Morton Arboretum Trip $20 Select One: qGrilled Portobello Mushroom with red pepper hummus on sun dried tomato foccacia qGrilled Flank Steak with horseradish mayo, red onion confit, watercress on tuscan roll qLemon Tarragon Chicken Salad, lettuce and tomato on sourdough ciabatta qI will attend the Wildflower Forum at the Renaissance Hotel $15 Saturday qReserve a box lunch for the Chicago Botanic Garden $20 Select One: qBrie, cucumber, radish and baby spinach, croissant with rosemary aioli qHerbed Roasted Turkey Breast, swiss, lettuce, tomato & Dijonaisse on herbed foccacia qBeef and Bleu Cheese Wrap qReserve a box lunch for the qFrank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio Trip -OR- qReserve a box lunch at the Renaissance Hotel . $20 Select One: qTurkey Club Sandwich with pesto mayo, tomato, bacon, swiss cheese on sourdough bread qAmerican Wrap with ham, American cheese, bibb lettuce, tomato, ranch dressing, spinach tortilla wrap qRoast Beef with Boursin cheese spread, tomato, bacon, lettuce, horseradish, foccacia bread qGarlic Tuna Salad, olive oil, tomato, lettuce on whole wheat roll qI will attend the Silent Auction and Annual Banquet Includes fresh garden greens salad, vegetable and cheesecake. $55 Select One: qChicken Cilantro Infusion, marinated grilled chicken, sundried tomato Cilantro Infusion qBaked Tilapia with lemon pepper, julienne leeks, garnished with lemon wedge qEggplant Parmesan, lightly breaded eggplant, marinara sauce, mozzarella cheese Guest Dining & Trips Total from All Guest Registration Forms Total Workshops from previous page qRegistration Fee on or before Aug. 1, 2012: members: $360. Non-members fee (includes membership) - US address: $445, non-US address: $460. qRegistration Fee after Aug. 1, 2012: members: $390. Non-members fee (includes membership) - US address: $475, non-US address: $490. Registration fee: Grand Total Amount Enclosed: 20 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ASBA 18th Annual Meeting and Conference 2012 Schedule-At—A—Glance All events held at the Chicago Botanic Garden unless otherwise indicated. Tour Buses leave promptly at stated times. Pre— And Post—Conference Activities October 16 & 17 9 AM-4 PM Workshop: The Art & Science of Mushrooms– Alexander Viazmensky, Dr. Gregory T. Mueller October 16 & 17 9 AM-4PM Workshop: Creating Translucent Roses in Watercolor–Karen Kluglein October 21, 2012 9 AM-3 PM Educator’s Forum, Renaissance Hotel–Sarah Roche, Moderator October 21, 22, 23 9 AM-4 PM Workshop: An Insight into my Watercolor Technique–Beverly Allen Conference Activities Wednesday, October 17 8 AM-4 PM: Board of Directors Meeting, Renaissance Hotel 8 AM-8 PM: Small Works Exhibition 2-5:30 PM: Registration, Renaissance Hotel 5:30-7:30 PM: Welcome Reception, Renaissance Hotel 7-9 PM: Committee Meetings, Renaissance Hotel 7-9 PM: Chapter and Artists’ Circle Meeting, Renaissance Hotel Thursday, October 18 6:30-8 AM: Breakfast, Renaissance Hotel 7 AM-8 PM: Bus shuttle between Renaissance Hotel and Chicago Botanic Garden 8 AM-8 PM: Small Works Exhibition 8 AM - 4 PM: Registration, Renaissance Hotel 8:30-11 AM: Portfolio Sharing 10-11:30 AM: The Botanical Art Market: Tips for a Career as a Botanical Artist, Susan Frei Nathan, Kate Nessler 10-11 AM: The Highgrove Florilegium, Leora Siegel 10:45-11:30 AM: Chicago Botanic Garden Tram Tour 11:30 AM-1PM: General Membership Meeting and Luncheon 1:15-4:15 PM: Techniques Showcase on Stage 1:15 PM: Pen & Ink Techniques, Francesca Anderson, Derek Norman 2:15 PM: Watercolor Techniques, Beverly Allen 3:15 PM: Watercolor and Gold Leaf on Vellum, Carol Jean Rogalski 1:15-4:15 PM: Gouache on Dark Backgrounds, Suzanne Wegener 1:15-4:15 PM: Wild Cucumbers in Graphite, Bruce Wilson 1:15-4:15 PM: 5 Things A Botanical Art Teacher Won’t Tell You About Color, Susan T. Fisher 2-3:30 PM: Dixon Prairie Tour, David Sollenburger 2-4 PM: Importance of Scanning Your Artwork, Tricia Peterson, Carol Woodin 4:30-5:30 PM: Beyond Accuracy – Creating Art, Panel Discussion with Kate Nessler, Robin Jess, Carol Woodin 5:30-7:30 PM: Small Works Exhibition Reception, Wine and Hors d’oeuvres 7-8 PM: Buses depart from Chicago Botanic Garden to Renaissance Hotel Friday, October 19 6:30-8 AM: Breakfast, Renaissance Hotel 8 AM-6 PM: Bus shuttle between Renaissance Hotel and Chicago Botanic Garden 8 AM-8 PM: Small Works Exhibition 8 AM: Bus departs from Renaissance Hotel to Morton Arboretum and Arts & Crafts Tours 8 AM-1 PM: Bus Trip to Arts & Crafts Tour: Ragdale and Crab Tree Farms 8 AM-5 PM: Bus Trip to Morton Arboretum Tour, The Suzette Morton Davidson Special Collection of the Sterling Morton Library Historical Overview of Botanical Art including Barbara Deitzch, G. Ehret, etc.–Rita Hassert, Arlene Widrivitch Morton Arboretum Tram Tour and Lecture–Ed Hedborn Herbarium Tour–Dr. Andrew Hipp 9 AM-12 PM: Designing Products from your Botanical Artwork using Photoshop, Wendy Hollender, Renaissance Hotel 9 AM-4 PM: Drawing on Black with Colored Pencil, Rhonda Nass, Renaissance Hotel 9 AM-4 PM: Textures in Watercolor, Denise Walser Kolar, Renaissance Hotel 9 AM-4 PM: Painting Vegetables with Beautiful Scars and Bumps, Asuka Hishiki 9 AM-4 PM: A Marriage of Art & Science (Watercolor), Catherine Watters 9 AM-4 PM: Colored Pencil Chemistry, Libby Kyer 9 AM-4 PM: Painting Dried Fall Specimens in Sepia, Lara Gastinger 9 AM-4 PM: Gourds in Watercolor, Helen Allen 12-1 PM: Box Lunches at Morton Arboretum, Renaissance Hotel, Chicago Botanic Garden 12-2:30 PM: Vellum Sales, Jesse Meyer, Pergamena, Renaissance Hotel 1-4 PM: Prairie Sedges and Grasses in Watercolor, Ann Tompkins 1-4 PM: 5 Things A Botanical Art Teacher Won’t Tell You about Color, Susan T. Fisher, Renaissance Hotel 2-3 PM: 17th and 18th Century Black and White Drawings and Engravings, Leora Siegel 4-6 PM: Vellum Sales, Jesse Meyer, Pergamena, Renaissance Hotel 5-6:15 PM: Grant Recipient Awards, Renaissance Hotel 6:30-7:30 PM: Wildflower Forum, Paleobotany for Today, Dr. Patrick Herendeen, Light Refreshments and Cash Bar, Renaissance Hotel Saturday, October 20 6:30-8 AM: Breakfast, Renaissance Hotel 6:30-8 AM: Small Works exhibitors pick up your artwork at the Renaissance Hotel 8 AM-6 PM: Bus shuttle between Renaissance Hotel and Chicago Botanic Garden 8 AM: Bus departs from Renaissance Hotel to Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio, Oak Park 8 AM-1 PM: Bus Trip to Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio, Oak Park 9 AM-10:30 AM: Wildflower Forum, Rare & Endangered Plants, Dr. Jeremie Fant 9 AM-12 PM: Juror Training, Carol Woodin 9 AM-4 PM: Back to the Basics: Pencil drawing, Heeyoung Kim 9 AM-4PM: The Botany of Botanical Art–Flowers, Mary Bauschelt 9 AM-4 PM: Drawing in Carbon Dust, Marlene Hill Donnelly 9 AM-4 PM: Vellum in Seven, Kate Nessler, Renaissance 9 AM-4 PM: Get it Right from the Start, Shapes & Foreshortening, Lee McCaffree, Renaissance Hotel 9 AM-4 PM: Orchids in Watercolor or Graphite, Kathy Creger 9 AM-4 PM: Botanical Scientific Illustration, Alice Tangerini 9 AM-4 PM: Open your Eyes to Nature, Hillary Parker 9 AM-4 PM: Colored Pencil on Mylar, Kathie Miranda, Renaissance Hotel 10:30 AM-12 PM: Wildflower Forum, Science Center Tour, Dr. Gregory T. Mueller 11 AM-12 PM: The Temple of Flora, Leora Siegel 11 AM-4 PM: Vellum Sales, Jesse Meyer, Pergamena, Renaissance Hotel 12-1 PM: Box Lunches at Chicago Botanic Garden, Renaissance Hotel 1 PM: Bus departs from Renaissance Hotel to Somme Prairie 1-3:30 PM: Bus Trip to Tall Grass Prairie, Somme Prairie, Stephen Packard 2-4 PM: Exhibiting at the UK Royal Horticultural Society, Victoria Matthews, Helen Allen 5-7 PM: Silent Auction, Renaissance Hotel, Cash Bar 7:15-8 PM: Silent Auction Purchasing 8-9:30 PM: ASBA’s Annual Awards Banquet, Renaissance Hotel Ð TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 21 PRESENTERS BIOS Beverly Allen (AUSTRALIA) Beverly’s work is held in the Shirley Sherwood Collection, the Prince of Wales’s Highgrove Florilegium, the RHS Lindley Library, Royal Botanic Gardens Library Kew, the Isaac and Alisa Sutton Collection, and the Botanic Gardens Trust Sydney. Beverly co-founded The Florilegium Society at the Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney. Helen Allen (ENGLAND) Helen is Course Director of the Diploma Course in Botanical Illustration and Painting at the English Gardening School. She has exhibited internationally and her work is in many collections including the Prince of Wales’s Highgrove Florilegium, the Hunt Institute and Kew. Francesca Anderson (NY) Francesca is a founding member of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Florilegium Society and a Fellow of The Linnean Society. Her pen and ink drawings have been exhibited worldwide and have appeared in scientific and art books including those by Dr. Shirley Sherwood. Francesca received two Gold medals from the RHS and the 2009 ASBA Diane Bouchier Award. Mary Bauschelt (WI) Studying botany and horticulture lead to a thirty-year career growing plants for the University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Botany Greenhouses and Botanical Garden. Mary has been studying, drawing and painting botanical art for twenty years and teaching for eleven. Kathy Creger (MN) Kathy is a botanical artist and teacher, an avid orchid collector and an American Orchid Society Judge who speaks about orchids internationally. Her orchid illustrations have been featured in several publications and her work exhibited in numerous local and ASBA shows as well as internationally. Marlene Hill Donnelly (IL) Marlene earned degrees from the University of Illinois and American Academy of Art. She is a science artist for the Field Museum and her work is published and exhibited in other institutions and museums worldwide. She is a Certificate Course instructor at the Chicago Botanic Garden and the Morton Arboretum. Dr. Jeremy Fant (IL) Dr. Fant is a conservation scientist specializing in molecular ecology at the Chicago Botanic Garden and he teaches biology at Northwestern University. He received his Ph.D. in Genetics at the University of Cambridge where he studied the conservation and maintenance of genetic diversity, both in situ and ex situ. His work has been widely published. Susan T. Fisher (CO) Susan is the former Director of the Art Institute at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum and the former program coordinator of the Certificate Program in Botanical Art and Illustration at Denver Botanic Gardens. Susan is a past president of the ASBA. She conducts workshop throughout the United States. Marilyn Garber (MN) Marilyn is an artist, educator and founder of the Minnesota School of Botanical Art. Her work has been exhibited at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Queen Sirikit Royal Botanic Garden, the Shirley Sherwood Gallery and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Laura Call Gastinger (VA) Lara is the chief illustrator for the Flora of Virginia Project to be published in 2012. Her work received a gold medal at the Royal Horticultural Society in London, was included in ASBA’s “Losing Paradise: Endangered Plants here and Around the World” and is represented by Susan Frei Nathan Fine Works on Paper. 22 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 Rita Hassert, Morton Arboretum (IL) Library Collections Manager of the Sterling Morton Library, Rita has been on the Library staff at the Arboretum since 1986. Holding an M.S. in Library and Information Science from the University of Illinois, she has also served on the board of the Council on Botanical and Horticultural Libraries. Ed Hedborn (IL) Ed is the Plant Records Manager and so-called Color Scout at The Morton Arboretum. He has collected, recorded, documented, planted, labeled, placed, and studied thousands of trees and other plants on the Arboretum’s 1,700 acres. So when it comes to the Arboretum’s fall foliage, Ed’s the one to know! Dr. Patrick Herendeen (IL) Dr. Herendeen is Co-Director, Division of Plant Science and Conservation and Director of Academic Partnerships at the Chicago Botanic Garden. He is a botanist and paleontologist interested in the evolutionary history of plants. Dr. Andrew Hipp (IL) Dr. Andrew Hipp is a plant systematist, and the Morton Arboretum Lab’s primary investigator. Active projects he is working on include systematics and molecular ecology of oaks, sedges, and elms; plant speciation and diversification; chromosome and genome size evolution; phylogenetic comparative methods and North American floristics. Asuka Hishiki (JAPAN) Asuka holds a MFA from Kyoto City University of Arts in Japan where she studied oil painting. Plants and nature are always her inspiration. She is a self-taught botanical artist who currently lives and works in New York. Her work has been shown in many international exhibitions. Wendy Hollender (NY) Wendy is a botanical artist, instructor and author. Previously a home furnishings textile designer, she designs products using her botanical artwork. Random House published Wendy’s book: Botanical Drawing in Color in 2010. Wendy’s illustrations have been in the New York Times, Oprah Magazine, and Real Simple Magazine. Robin A. Jess (NJ) Executive Director of the ASBA, Robin illustrated books for The New York Botanical Garden by botanist Dr. Arthur Cronquist. Her focus is plants of the NJ Pine Barrens. Robin has received numerous grants, fellowships and awards for her artwork. Heeyoung Kim (IL) Heeyoung has received awards at ASBA/HSNY exhibitions for pencil drawing and watercolor painting. She received a gold medal from the Royal Horticultural Society in March 2012 and an ink drawing is in the Hunt Institute’s collection. She has shown her works internationally, hoping they would serve as a bridge between the public and conservation efforts. Karen Kluglein (NY) Karen was an illustrator in her previous life and now concentrates on her botanical painting. She is a recent winner of the ASBA Diane Bouchier Award for Excellence in Botanical Art and has work in the permanent collection of The New York Botanical Garden’s Historical Library. Denise Walser-Kolar (MN) Denise earned her Bachelor’s Degree in Graphic Design and Commercial Illustration from the College of Visual Arts in Saint Paul, Minnesota. In 2011, she was awarded a Silver-Gilt Medal by the Royal Horticultural Society in London. Her work has been widely exhibited and is in the permanent collection of the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation. Libby Kyer (CO) A professed control freak, Libby finds colored pencils the answer to her demanding art needs. She has taught colored pencil techniques extensively for 15 years, and her award-winning works are collected nationally and abroad, including the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation and Packard Foundation. She is the Editor of the Journal. Tania Marien (CA) Interested in interpretive techniques about plants, how people make meaning, and how drawing can be used as a learning tool to encourage an interest in plants, Tania explores these topics through ArtPlantae, a resource connecting artists, naturalists and educators. Victoria Matthews (ENGLAND) Victoria is a Fellow of the Linnean Society of London and holds a Diploma in Plant Taxonomy from the University of Edinburgh, UK, and an Editor of The Kew Magazine. A botanical art collector, she serves on several judging and selection committees including the RHS, SBA Distance Learning Diploma, and the Prince of Wales’s Highgrove Florilegium. Lee McCaffree (CA) Lee is a botanical illustrator who emphasizes the need for basic skills. She is a primary instructor in the Botanical Art Certificate Program at Filoli in California. She has exhibited in England and throughout the US. Her work is included in the Hunt Institute, Kew Garden, and Filoli Florilegium collections. Kathie Miranda (CT) Kathie is an award-winning artist and innovative botanical art instructor for The New York Botanical Garden. She serves on the board of the ASBA, and is an active member of the Colored Pencil Society of America and the Connecticut Botanical Society. The illustration and preservation of native woodland plants are her passion. Jesse Meyer (NY) Jesse’s family company, Pergamena, has been preparing animal skins since 1550. He has refined the quality of parchment skins for use by artists, calligraphers, bookbinders and designers. Dr. Gregory M. Mueller (IL) Dr. Mueller is Vice President for Science and Academic Programs at the Chicago Botanic Garden. His research and teaching focus on the diversity, biogeography, ecology, and conservation of mushrooms. Greg has carried out extensive fieldwork throughout much of the world. He is author of six books and nearly 100 scientific articles. Rhonda Nass (WI) Rhonda thanks her high school art teacher, who told the stubborn teenager she could never be an artist, for launching her into her profession: a UW-Madison art degree, freelance illustration (i.e. Biology of Plants) and currently, art commissions, publications, teaching and gallery work. Susan Frei Nathan (NY) Susan is an art historian, who directed two NYC galleries before establishing her company Susan Frei Nathan Fine Works on Paper. She promotes the sale and placement of contemporary botanical art and builds collections for her many corporate, private and institutional clients. Kate Nessler (AR) Kate has been painting plants for 29 years and began her work on vellum in 1997. Innovative and adventurous, her award-winning work is internationally appreciated. The National Museum for Women in the Arts, the Royal Horticultural Society, Hunt Institute, Shirley Sherwood Collection and Highgrove Florilegium hold examples of her work. Derek Norman (IL) Derek’s pen & ink drawings are award-winning and reflect his passion for all things wildflower. Founder of the Midwest Center for Botanical Documentation, Derek delights in enlisting fellow artists in the pursuit and preservation of the vanishing species. Stephen Packard, (IL) Stephen is Founding Director of the Chicago area programs of the National Audubon Society and teaches at Northwestern University. Stephen initiated many of Illinois’ ecological restoration projects including Nachusa Grasslands and the Spring Creek Forest Preserves. He is on the editorial board of the journal Ecological Restoration. Hillary Parker (GA) Hillary is a naturalist and award-winning botanical watercolor artist whose paintings are exhibited and collected worldwide through private commissions, galleries, and juried exhibitions. Hillary holds a B.S. degree in Art Education and has been teaching workshops, private classes, and presenting lectures throughout the U.S. for 22 years. Tricia Peterson (IL) Tricia’s traditional illustrations reflect her love for animals and nature. That combination has influenced her career as a graphic designer, artist, technical illustrator, product developer, and exhibit designer. Communicating and educating by creating a warm feeling through graphics and art is always her goal. Tricia owns Blueraven Creative and is co-founder of DiscoveryPen™. Lynne Railsback (WI) Lynne doesn’t paint roses, orchids or iris. The plants that grow in the woods and prairies in the Midwest are her favorite subjects. She is grateful for the opportunities that have opened up to her and the artists she has met in this career that began after retirement. Sarah Roche (MA) Sarah is Education Director for the Wellesley College Botanical Garden’s Certificate in Botanical Art and Illustration program. She is a Gallery artist at the South Shore Art Center in Cohasset MA, and an artist member of the Copley Society of Art in Boston. She is the Founding Director of the New England Society of Botanical Artists and chair of ASBA’s Education Committee. Carol Jean Rogalski (IL) While researching the history of the active ingredients of herbs and modern pharmaceuticals at The Sterling Morton Library, Carol was introduced to botanical art. She completed a Botanical Art and Illustration Certificate at The Morton Arboretum and studies the techniques of egg tempera, silverpoint and illumination with gold upon natural vellum. Deb Shaw (CA) Deb has a degree in fine art from Pomona College, The Claremont Colleges, where she also studied botany and native California flora. She is principal of db Shaw Studios, an award-winning design firm. Deborah’s work has been displayed in many exhibitions, and is in private collections. Leora Siegel (IL) Leora is Director of the Lenhardt Library at the Chicago Botanic Garden. She holds M.S. degrees in Library & Information Science and Natural Resources & Environmental Sciences. Leora has served on national, regional and local library boards. David Sollenberger (IL) David is a restoration ecologist for the Chicago Botanic Garden developing and managing the Dixon Prairie. David currently works for the Dixon National Tallgrass Prairie Seed Bank at CBG and does botanical illustration at the Field Museum in Chicago and various publications. Dr. Ruth Starratt (MA) A professor of art education at Boston University, Ruth’s field of research is the art of Oceania, where she documents 50,00-year-old petroglyphs. Her paintings are shown in NESBA exhibitions, at the Arizona Desert Museum, Wellesley College and in the BU galleries. Alice Tangerini (Washington, DC) Alice is a staff illustrator for the Department of Botany, Smithsonian Institution since 1972. She has taught classes from the elementary to the graduate level in scientific botanical illustration at schools, colleges and botanical gardens. Her work has been exhibited in ASBA and GNSI exhibitions and with the Botanical Art Society of the National Capital Region. Ann Tompkins (IL) Ann received her botanical art certificate from The Morton Arboretum in 2009. Her work is shown there twice a year at the Nature Artist Guild’s juried exhibitions. She teaches a class at the Arboretum called Nature Detail in Watercolor. Alexander Viazmensky (RUSSIA) Alexander was born in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) in 1946. Educated as an electrical engineer, Alexander has been a freelance jeweler and artist since 1976. He specializes in landscapes and botanicals and his work is in many important collections worldwide. Alexander has conducted master classes in botanical art schools and botanic gardens since 2004. Catherine Watters (CA) Catherine is an instructor and curriculum developer at Filoli in Woodside, CA. Collections include The Hunt Institute, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Filoli, the Paris Natural History Museum, the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew and the Isaac & Alisa Sutton Collection. Her work was recently featured in Curtis’s Botanical Magazine. Suzanne Wegener (IL) Suzanne has a degree in Scientific Illustration and a MS in Biomedical Visualization. She is a freelance illustrator and teaches illustration and fine art at historical societies and art leagues, The Morton Arboretum and the Field Museum of Natural History. She is the Manager of Nature Arts Education at the Morton Arboretum. Bruce Wilson (MN) Bruce comes from a fine art and commercial art background and is an instructor at the Minnesota School of Botanical Art, and teaches at Filoli in California. He exhibits nationally and locally, illustrates books and contributes to magazines. Arlene Widrivitch (IL) Arlene cares for the botanical art collection at the Sterling Morton Library. She enjoys providing art for use as teaching aids in the Arboretum’s Certificate Program in Botanical Art and Illustration where she is both a graduate of the program and an instructor. She is a member and past board member of the Nature Artists’ Guild of The Morton Arboretum. Carol Woodin (NY) For more than 20 years Carol has been painting plants. She is internationally known for her work with orchids. Her art is in the collections of the Hunt Institute; Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew; Dr. Shirley Sherwood, and Isaac & Alisa Sutton. She is the Director of Exhibitions for ASBA. The ASBA Silent Auction Needs Your Donations T he Silent Auction will be held before the Annual Conference Banquet on Saturday evening, October 20th 2012. We urge you to make a donation. The proceeds support ASBA’s Artist & Education Grants and publication of The Botanical Artist, Journal of the ASBA. Both are extremely vital to ASBA’s mission. All gifts should be new, or used collectables such as books, attractively presented and have a botanical theme. One of the most generous contributions is original artwork; however, prints are also appreciated. Both should be backed by foam board and include a clear protective covering. Other popular items include: books, handmade crafts, giftware, jewelry, stationery, scarves, art supplies and children’s items. Again all items should have an association with botanical art or plants. Remember the majority of attendees travel by plane, so size and shape are important. Also, please limit duplicates to no more than 3. You can be part of the conference even if you can’t attend by making a donation to the Silent Auction. Please go to www.asba-art.org and click on Annual Meeting for the submission form that includes the required information. Important Dates: September 24th - Donation Information Deadline. Items brought to the conference without sending the donation information by this deadline will either be returned to the donor or be held over for next year’s Silent Auction. October 1st - Shipped items to be received. You will receive shipping information after your donation information has been submitted TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 23 later than 15 September 2012. Artwork will not be insured by venue while exhibition is hanging. Hanging Rights: The ASBA retains the right to refuse to hang work when received if the framing does not meet specified guidelines as above, the work is packed in Styrofoam peanuts, or the quality of the artwork differs greatly from Listings are chronological, starting with the earliest exhibition opening that represented by the submission materials. Artwork may not be removed until date. Full information is available online at www.www.asba-art.org, close of exhibition. including entry forms for all ASBA events. Awards: “Chicago’s Top 12” will be awarding 12 Artistic Merit Awards, ASBA Cover Art including the Anne Marie Carney Award, People’s Choice, plus 10 others. Volume 18, Issue 3 of The Botanical Artist, September 2012 Publicity and Catalog: With appropriate funding, a catalog will be prepared Members may submit artwork specifically for the cover of the and produced using the images you provide. Your image may also be used Journal. in publicity for the exhibition, which may include print and/or electronic Eligibility: Any ASBA member in good standing (dues paid for 2012) form.. Subject: Two-dimensional original botanical art or illustration. First Contact: Name: Debra D’Souza; email: [email protected]; PH: 715consideration will be given to works representing species that are present in 308-1055 Website: debradsouza.comApril 25 to May 24, 2013 the artist’s geographical region by season - March - Spring, June - Summer, April 25 – May 24, 2013 Following in the Bartrams’ Footsteps: September - Autumn. Contemporary Botanical Artists Explore the Bartrams’ Legacy Presentation: Only portrait oriented (taller than it is wide - please review Bartram’s Garden, 54th St. and Lindbergh Avenue, Philadelphia, PA previous covers) images are accepted. This traveling exhibition will feature artworks of plants grown, sold, Submissions: Submit online, up to 2 scans (full color, and introduced by John and William Bartram, artwork sized to 8”h, 300 dpi, .jpgs only) created centered upon their native US plant introductions. within the last 2 years. Submissions must be A list of plants is posted on our website, and on that accompanied by completed submission of image form list exotic plants denoted by an E will have available at www.asba-art.org. If your image is over secondary priority. This list is referenced below. The 40 meg, please send a CD/DVD to Libby at address exhibition will be displayed in the beautifully below. CDs and DVDs will not be returned. restored historical stone barn, the oldest barn in Submission deadline: Received by August 1, 2012. Philadelphia. Travel venues will be announced, and Notification: Results are held confidential until artworks submitted must be available through the publication. Look for your artwork on the cover! end of 2014. Contact: Libby Kyer, Editor, The Botanical Artist; PH: Eligibility: Current ASBA members, and 303.322.3242; email: [email protected]. Mail Philadelphia Society of Botanical Illustrators members CD/DVDs to Libby Kyer, Editor, The Botanical Artist, Jurors: Allen Crawford, Plankton Art Company; Joel Fry, 717 Krameria Street, Denver, CO 80220. Curator, Bartram’s Garden; Wendy Hollender, botanical October10-20. 2012 artist; Ellen Petersen, a Director of Bartram’s Garden and Chicago’s Top 12 – former ASBA President. “Small Works” Exhibition Subject: Plants grown or introduced by the Chicago Botanic Garden, 1000 Lake Cook Road, Bartram family. Glencoe, IL Media accepted: Two-dimensional original botanical This non-juried exhibition will be open to all artwork, size limit 38x48” registered attendees of the 2012 ASBA Conference. Submissions: Number per entry accepted: 3 Each attendee may submit one original botanical Entry Fee $35 artwork. The exhibition will be installed prior to the Digital files only: 300 dpi, image 8” high, .ttf or .jpg conference, and will be open to the public on files, submitted on CD labeled with marker only Wednesday, October 10, 2012. The exhibition will close with artist’s name and name(s) of artworks(s). on Saturday, October 20. Pick-up of artist’s work is Individual files on disk labeled with artist’s name and required prior to the close of the conference. image title. CD will not be returned. Send check (or Eligibility: All conference attendees pay via PayPal.com) for US$ 35, payable to ASBA, Jurors: non-juried entry form, and one to three images on CD to: Subject: Botanical American Society of Botanical Artists, ATTN: Carol Media accepted: Two-dimensional original artwork Woodin, 2900 Southern Blvd., Bronx, NY 10458-5126 excluding photography and digital works. Submission Deadline: Friday, January 11, 2013. Submissions: Number per entry accepted One, Entry Presentation: Framed size limit, 38x48, either Fee, No fee Digital files only: 300 dpi, image 8”high, horizontal or vertical. Exhibition will travel; accepted .tif or .jpg files, submitted on CD labeled with marker artists will be notified of framing requirements. only with artist’s name and image title. CD will Notification: Acceptances and regrets will be sent by not be returned. February 15, 2013 by email and/or letter. If accepted, artist CD Submission Deadline: Wednesday, August 1, insures that artwork(s) will be available for display. If the 2012. Sending entries to Derek Norman is in two parts artist withdraws the artwork before exhibition, the artist will - first mail a CD with your image by August 1, 2012, not be eligible to show at any ASBA exhibition for the then ship your artwork to arrive by September 15, next two years. 2012. Mail to Derek Norman, 999 Wade Street, Shipping and Insurance: Full packing and shipping Highland Park, Illinois 60035. requirements will be provided to accepted artists. Presentation: Artwork must be framed to 12x12" Artists are responsible for cost of shipping and using the specific frame indicated: Dick Blick, Above: D-ring details and mounting of D-ring insurance to and from the venue. No Styrofoam “Essential Natural Wood Frame Kit”, complete with placement on frame details peanuts allowed. Artwork will be insured by venue plexiglas, cost approximately $19.58 - (Item #18862while exhibition is hanging. 1904). Artwork must be presented in a professional fashion, matted with a Hanging Rights: The ASBA retains the right to refuse to hang work when white or off-white mat only. Hanging must be done with “D” Ring (2 Holes) received if the framing is inadequate, the work is packed in Styrofoam Small Hangers–also obtainable from Dick Blick, (Item #18960-1002) cost, peanuts, or the quality of the artwork differs greatly from that usually $1.69. Please note - no wire is used with this hanging method. represented by the submission materials. It is the responsibility of each artist to purchase and install these hooks as Sales of works: Artwork may be for sale, but it is not required. Works shown (see diagram) - 3-inches from top of frame to top of “D” Ring Small may not be removed until the end of traveling schedule at the end of Hangers. Hardware and framing requirements must be followed to be 2014. If sold, 40% of the sale price will be retained (20% by ASBA, 20% included in the exhibition! Unfortunately, artwork not meeting these specific by the host venue where sale takes place). requirements will not be hung. Please note: Check the Dick Blick Awards: To be announced website, as periodically the frame & Plexiglas kit and the “D” Ring Small Publicity and Catalog: Images submitted for this exhibition may be used Hangers are offered at a discounted price. International participants: in a catalog or publicity in print or electronic form for the exhibition and please contact Debra D’Souza at [email protected] for may be used on the website for promoting the exhibition before, during additional information. and after its run without further permission being sought. Notification: Artist assures that artwork will be available for display. If the Contact: Carol Woodin; PH: 866.691.9080, email: artist withdraws the artwork before exhibition, the artist will not be eligible [email protected]; Website: www.asba-art.org to show at any ASBA exhibition for the next 2 years. September, 2013 to November, 2013 Shipping and Insurance: Artists are responsible for cost of shipping and Sixteenth Annual International insurance to the venue. Save the box (& packing materials) that Blick ships American Society of Botanical Artists at your frame in and re-use it for shipping your artwork to the exhibit. Artwork The Horticultural Society of New York will be collected by each participating artist prior to the close of the The Horticultural Society of New York, 148 W. 37th Street, New York, NY conference. No Styrofoam peanuts allowed. Artwork must be shipped to Our longest running collaboration, this exhibition is held in mid-town Derek Norman, 999 Wade Street, Highland Park, Illinois 60035 to arrive no Manhattan in the Hort’s lovely gallery. CALLS FOR ENTRIES 24 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 Eligibility: Open to all ASBA members in good standing, (dues curiosity and should provide inspiration for great botanical art, encouraging paid), worldwide. exciting portrayals of new subject matter, and capturing the Jurors: to be announced. imaginations of artists and viewers alike. Subject: Botanical specimens. Work may have appeared in regional or Submission deadline will be in September 2013, so you have a year and invitational exhibitions, but should not have been shown in another a half to create something special for the show. Tentative plans are being international exhibition of the ASBA. made to travel the exhibition to other venues. Watch for further information Media accepted: Two-dimensional original botanical art. No photography, in upcoming issues of the Journal. no digitally generated work, and no three-dimensional works will Eligibility: ASBA members in good standing, world-wide. be accepted. Jurors: To be announced. Submissions: Number per entry accepted 3, Subject: “Weird, wild, and wonderful” botanical subjects. Work may have Entry Fee: $35 Digital files only: 300 dpi, image files, submitted on CD appeared in regional or invitational exhibitions, but should not have labeled with marker only with artist’s name and name(s) of artworks(s). been shown in another ASBA international exhibition. Individual files on disk labeled with artist’s name and image title. CD Media accepted: Two-dimensional original botanical art. No photography, will not be returned. no digitally generated work, and no three-dimensional works will be Send check (or pay via PayPal.com) for US$ 35, payable to ASBA, accepted. entry form, and one to three images on CD to: American Society of Submissions: Three works per entry. Botanical Artists, ATTN: Carol Woodin, 2900 Southern Blvd., Bronx, NY Entry Fee $35 Digital files only: 300 dpi, image 8” high, .tif or .jpg files, 10458-5126. submitted on CD labeled with marker only with artist’s name and names of Submission Deadline: Friday, March 29, 2013. artworks. Individual files on disk must be labeled with artist’s name and Presentation: Framed size limit: 30” x 36”. Accepted artwork must be image title. Disks will not be returned. presented in professional fashion, matted in white or off-white only, Send check for US$35, payable to ASBA (or pay via PayPal.com, to under Plexiglas, framed in medium brown or gold wood, simple “L” [email protected]) entry form, and one to three images on CD to: American (gallery frame) profile, wired and ready for hanging. Artwork not meeting Society of Botanical Artists, ATTN: Carol Woodin, 2900 Southern Blvd., these standards will not be hung. If artist chooses to bring the work into spec, a 10458-5126. handling fee of $100 will be assessed in addition to all costs for Submission Deadline: September 2013 reframing/matting/repair. Presentation: Framed size limit in inches, wxh: 30x36” Accepted artwork Notification: Acceptances and regrets will be sent by (May 3, 2013 by must be presented in professional fashion, matted in white or off-white only, email and/or letter. If accepted, artist insures that artwork(s) will be under Plexiglas, framed in medium brown or gold wood, simple “L” (gallery available for display. If the artist frame) profile, wired and ready for withdraws the artwork before exhibition, hanging. Artwork not meeting these the artist will not be eligible to show standards will not be hung. If artist chooses to bring the work into spec, a at any ASBA exhibition for the next handling fee of $100 will be assessed in two years. addition to all costs for Shipping and Insurance: Full packing reframing/matting/repair. and shipping requirements will be Notification: Acceptances and regrets will provided to accepted artists. Artists are be sent by by email. If accepted, artist responsible for cost of shipping and insures that artwork(s) will be available for insurance to and from the venue. No display. If the artist withdraws the artwork Styrofoam peanuts allowed. Artwork before exhibition, the artist will not be will be insured by venue while eligible to show at any ASBA exhibition for exhibition is hanging. the next two years. Hanging Rights: The ASBA retains the Shipping and Insurance: Full packing right to refuse to hang work when and shipping requirements will be received if the framing is inadequate, the provided to accepted artists. Artists are work is packed in Styrofoam peanuts, or responsible for cost of shipping and the quality of the artwork differs greatly insurance to and from the venue. No from that represented by the submission Styrofoam peanuts allowed. Artwork materials. will be insured by venue while Sales of works: Must be for sale: Works exhibition is hanging. may not be removed until close of Hanging Rights: The ASBA retains the exhibition. When sold, 40% of the sale right to refuse to hang work when received price will be retained (20% ASBA, if the framing is inadequate, the work is 20% The Hort). packed in Styrofoam peanuts, or the Awards: The Horticultural Society of quality of the artwork differs greatly New York offers a “Best of Show” Award, from that represented by the submission and there will be an ASBA Jurors’ materials. Award of $400. Other awards will be Sales of works: Requirements to be announced. determined. Publicity and Catalog: Images submitted for this exhibition may be Awards: To be determined. used in a catalog or publicity in print or Publicity and Catalog: Images submitted electronic form for the exhibition and for this exhibition may be used in a catalog may be used on the website for Verbascum thapsus, ©Betsy Rogers-Knox 2012 or publicity for the exhibition and may be promoting the exhibition before, during used on the website for promoting the and after its run without further permission being sought. exhibition before, during, and after its run without further permission Contact: Carol Woodin; PH: 866.691.9080, email: being sought. [email protected]; Website: www.asba-art.org Contact: Carol Woodin; PH: 866.691.9080: email: [email protected]; Website: www.asba-art.org April to August, 2014 Member Institution Calls Weird, Wild and Wonderful September 14 - October 27, 2013 The New York Botanical Garden, 2900 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, NY Botanical Art of the Sonora Desert: Past and Present 10458-5126 The theme of the second New York Botanical Garden Triennial will be Arizona-Sonoran Desert Museum Ironwood Gallery, ASDM Art Institute, “Weird, Wild, and Wonderful,” inviting the artist to engage in seeking visually 2021 N Kinney Road, Tucson, AZ This exhibit will focus on the unique plants of the Sonoran Desert. This unusual plants and creating works of art that celebrate the bizarre and yet region comprises the area along the border of Mexico and the United States. beautiful flora of the world. Botanical oddities and curiosities can be found locally in your yard, in It includes: most of Sonora, Mexico and southern Arizona; the Baja natural circumstances or in a botanical garden. They may be cultivated California Peninsula, the islands in the Sea of Cortez, and southeastern edibles or ornamentals that have developed in an unusual way. Or as California. The exhibit will display past works by internationally regarded examples, they may be members of the Arum family – dragon arum, titan botanical illustrators as well as works by contemporary botanical artists. arum, those with a mace-like spadix; or Solanum pyracanthos, a tomato Eligibility: Open to all artists relative with orange, aggressive thorns or the Rafflesia which is the largest Jurors: To be announced Subject: Focus is on the unique plants of the Sonoran Desert region flower in the world. There are plants that mimic insects such as those in the orchid family, Media Accepted:Original botanical art and illustration in any 2kinetic plants that use motion to trap pollinators, carnivorous plants and dimensional media. graceful “walking” ferns. An artist could focus on something as large as a Submissions: Any number of original artworks. whole clonal colony of aspen or as small as the carnivorous round-leaved Entry Fee $40. Email images in .jpg format at 300dpi. Include the artist’s sundew. An albino form of a flower might be selected or the “witches broom” name, title of artwork, media, size and sale price or NFS (not for sale) to: (Continued on Page 26) of branches caused by a virus or insect. The choices are as wide as the artist’s [email protected]. Send check of money TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ PAGE 25 CALLS FOR ENTRIES..., CONTINUED (Continued from Page 25) order for US$40, payable to ASDM Art Institute, 2021 N Kinney Road, Tucson, AZ 85743. Submission Deadline: August 2, 2013 Presentation: No framed size. No size limit. Original artwork only. All pieces must be matted, framed (Plexiglas) and wired for hanging. No sawtooth or clip hangers. Notification: Acceptances and regrets will be sent by August 16, 2013 by email. If accepted, artist insures that artwork(s) will be available for display. Shipping and Insurance: Full packing and shipping requirements will be provided to accepted artists. Artists are responsible for cost of shipping and insurance to and from the venue. No Styrofoam peanuts allowed. Artwork must arrive at venue by Wednesday, September 11, 2013. Artwork will be insured by venue while exhibition is hanging. Sales of works: May be for sale, NFS accepted also. Works may not be removed until close of exhibition. When sold, 40% of the sale price will be retained by the ASDM, the hosting institution. Awards: To be announced Publicity and Catalog: If accepted, your images may be used in publicity for the exhibition. With appropriate funding, a catalog will be prepared using the images you provide for jurors. Contact: Margaret Pope, PH: 520.795.1285; email: [email protected], www.sonorandesertflorilegium.org Other Calls for Entries March 17 to April 14, 2013 America’s Parks Through the Beauty of Art Ella Carothers Dunnegan Art Gallery; with possible tour venues to follow 511 North Pike, Bolivar, MO This exhibition, open to all artists, recognizes and promotes excellence in original artworks depicting any North American park (national, state, provincial, county, city) in Canada, Mexico and The United States. The 2013 inaugural exhibition is scheduled as the first of three, with others to follow in 2014 and 2015. This is the inaugural exhibition that will premiere in Bolivar, Missouri at The Ella Carothers Dunnegan Gallery of Art. The Dunnegan has hosted such notable traveling museum exhibitions as Art and the Animal, The Society of Animal Artists; Blossom ~ Art of Flowers, sponsored by The Susan K. Black Foundation and Exquisite Miniatures by Wes and Rachelle Siegrist. Eligibility: Open Jurors: M. Stephen Doherty, Editor, PleinAir Magazine; Susan T. Fisher, American Society of Botanical Artists Past President and former ArizonaSonora Desert Museum Art Institute Director; and Todd Wilkinson, Managing Editor,Wildlife Art Journal Subject: Any North American park (national, state, provincial, county, city) in Canada, Mexico and The United States, original, two-dimensional art completed in 2010, ‘11, or ‘12 is eligible. Media accepted: Eligible media includes: oil, acrylic, watercolor, gouache, mixed media, pastel, pencil, pen and ink, tempera, batik, alkyd, scratchboard, and original prints (e.g., lithograph, etching, engraving, serigraph). Ineligible media includes: any media not listed above such as computer enhanced or generated artwork, photography, reproduction prints, sculpture, and video. Submissions: Early-Entry Fee: One entry, US$30.00; two entries, US$50.00; each additional entry, US$20.00: Standard Deadline Fee: One entry, US$40.00; each additional entry, US$25.00. Only digital JPEG photographs will be accepted. All entry JPEGs must be submitted on CD or DVD. Emailed entries will not be accepted. Digital images should be 150 dpi, with a maximum dimension of 7’’ in JPEG format. Images should be in RGB color format. All file names must include the artist’s last name, initial of first name, and first few words of artwork title (e.g., smithjarches1.jpg). CDs and DVDs should be labeled with the artist’s last name, first name, artwork title(s), and year. Submission Deadline: Early entry postmark deadline: August 31, 2012. Standard entry postmark deadline: October 15, 2012. All entries must be received by October 25, 2012. Presentation: Not including frame or mat, the maximum size for entered artworks is 900 square inches. Calculate by multiplying the horizontal and vertical dimensions. Example: A 30x30” painting would equal 900 square inches. Notification: Acceptances and regrets will be sent by November 30– December 15, 2012 by email and/or letter. Shipping and Insurance: Full packing and shipping requirements will be provided to accepted artists. Artists are responsible for cost of shipping and insurance to and from the venue. No Styrofoam peanuts allowed. Artwork will be insured by venue while exhibition is hanging. Sales of works: May be for sale, NFS accepted: Works may not be removed until close of exhibition. When sold, 70% of the sale price to the artist, 30% to hosting institution. Awards: Awards will include: Susan Kathleen Black Foundation Floral Art Award, America’s Parks Curator’s Choice Award, Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum Juror’s Choice Award, PleinAir™ Magazine Juror’s Choice Award, Society of Animal Artist’s Wildlife Art Award, and Wildlife Art Journal Juror’s Choice Award. Contact: David J. Wagner, PhD, Curator/Tor Director; email: 26 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 [email protected]; PH: 414.221.6878; website: davidjwagner.com; download prospectus at: davidjwagnerllc.com/competitions.html Approximately 4 months, Spring and Summer, 2014 Plants Native to the Mid Atlantic US Botanic Garden, Washington, DC The Botanical Artists for Education & the Environment (BAEE) is a nonprofit organization of artists, primarily in the Mid-Atlantic area. We are working on a book to be titled American Botanical Paintings: Plants Native to the Mid-Atlantic, scheduled to be published in the fall of 2013. An exhibit will follow at the US Botanic Garden in Washington, DC, in spring of 2014. Selected exhibit artists will donate use of their work for the book, but retain copyright; BAEE will retain copyright to the book. See contact information below for more details, such as lists of plants native to the Mid-Atlantic, a list of plants that are being painted(we discourage but do not have a rule against duplications), and detailed project specifications. Eligibility: All artists living or working in the Mid-Atlantic region who are members of ASBA or other botanical art organizations Jurors: Holly Shimizu, Executive Director of the USBG; Bill McLaughlin, Curator of Plants at the USBG; Dick Rauh, Immediate Past President of the ASBA; one other juror to be determined. Subject: Plants native to the Mid-Atlantic defined for this project as including the states of Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, District of Columbia, Virginia, and West Virginia. Media Accepted: watercolor, graphite, pen & ink, egg tempera, colored pencil. Submission: January 1, 2013. Entry fee: $25 for up to 5 paintings (no more than 3 will be selected for the book). Digital files only: 360 dpi, 8” high, TIFF files only. Portrait orientation preferred. Notification: Acceptances and regrets will be sent by email no later than March 1, 2013. Shipping and Insurance: Details will be provided; however, artists are responsible for insurance. Sales of Works: Paintings cannot be sold at the USBG; however, artists may provide a card with their contact information. Awards: To be determined. Publicity and Catalog: If accepted your images may be used in publicity for the book and/or exhibit. With appropriate funding, a catalog will be prepared using images you provided for the jurors. Presentation: Paintings selected should not be matted or framed; BAEE will arrange to have this done for purposes of conformity. Artwork should be created 100% life-size. Very small plants may be enlarged provided a scale is given. For the book, we hope to reduce paintings by no more than 50%. Page size in the book will be 8.5” x 11.” Participants: Artists participating in the project will be kept updated as the project progresses. Contact: Bonnie Driggers at [email protected], PH: 703/573/8956, or Esther Carpi at [email protected] October 31 to November 11, 2012 Botanical Artists of Canada Juried Exhibition Papermill Gallery, Todmorden Heritage Mills, 94 Pottery Row, Toronto, Ontario, Canada This annual juried exhibition and small paintings gallery is open to all BAC members in good standing; non-members may apply and pay for membership in BAC prior to entering the exhibition. See website for membership and exhibition requirements. Eligibility: All BAC members in good standing Jurors: TBA - 3 qualified botanical artists Subject: any original botanical work–check Call for Entry on BAC website for definition Media accepted: watercolor, oil, acrylic, water media, mixed media, pastel, color pencil, ink, and scratchboard. Submissions: Number per entry accepted 3 Entry Fee $45 for up to 3 pieces for juried portion; $10 for one entry into small paintings gallery. Mail check payable to BAC; email entry form and digital images to Sherry Mitchell at [email protected]. See Call for Entry for complete submission details. Submission Deadline: August 15, 2012 Presentation: Framed size limit not to exceed 1728 sq. in. Notification: Acceptances and regrets will be sent by September 15, 2012 Shipping and Insurance: Full packing and shipping requirements will be provided to accepted artists. Sales of works: May be for sale, NFS accepted: Works may not be may not be removed until close of exhibition. When sold, 15% of the sale price will be retained by the hosting institution. Awards: $500 Best in Show, 3 - $100 awards for different media Publicity and Catalog: If accepted your images may be used in publicity for the exhibition. With appropriate funding, a catalog will be prepared using the images you provide for jurors. Contact: Sherry Mitchell; PH: 250.752.3346; email: [email protected]; website: www.botanicalartistsofcanada.org/events.php Anita Walsmit Sachs Gains 2nd Prize in 2012 Margaret Flockton Competition R un by the Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust, the annual exhibition, now in its ninth year, honors scientific illustrators working in pen and ink. This year’s Margaret Flockton Award winners and entrants came from around the world including repeating entries from Australia, New Zealand, Spain, Brazil, United Kingdom, Netherlands and new countries represented by Thailand and South Korea. Second prize of $2,000 went to Anita Walsmit Sachs from The Netherlands, for the pen and ink illustration of Lepisanthes senegalensis, part of a series made for the Flora of Nepal, a commission from the National Herbarium, Leiden University and Naturalis. Anita will donate her prize money to Hortus Botanicus Leiden. It is the oldest botanical garden in Europe, dating from 1593; the first Lepisanthes senegalensis, ink on paper, ©Anita Walsmit Sachs 2012 prefect was Carolus Clusius who promoted the tulip in The Netherlands. Funds will be used to purchase furniture for the botanical art classroom, where she teaches botanical drawing. Anita tell us, “I am really thrilled with the prize, as I try to make people aware of the beauty of scientific drawings and their scientific but also decorative value,” This species is found in the old world tropics, ranging from tropical Africa via Madagascar and south and southwest Asia to the Malay Archipelago. Congratulations, Anita! SWSBA Reports on Chapter Activities S WSBA members have been particularly busy during the first quarter of 2012. To begin, members contributed illustrations to Legumes of Arizona: An Illustrated Flora and Reference for The University of Arizona’s Desert Legume Program. The Program held an exhibition of a selection of these artworks at Boyce Thompson Arboretum for two months this year. As well as completed drawings, works-in-progress were displayed, showing various stages of production. “The exhibit provided an opportunity for the public to view original illustrations before publication and to learn about the scientific illustration process,” says Kirsten Lake, Program project coordinator. The West Valley Arts Council (WVAC), the AZ SciTech Festival, and Glendale Arts Commission sponsored Botanical Art & Illustration, an exhibit held during Arizona’s SciTech in February and March. Karen Gengle’s pen and ink illustration Echinocereus engelmannii Echinocereus engelmannii, 11x14” pen and ink on Bristol board, ©Karen Gengle 2012 received Second Place. Susan Ashton got Third Place for her watercolor Castilleja kaibabensis, and Joyce Peters and Diane Dockery Hazard both received Honorable Mentions. “The organizers of the AZ SciTech Festival wanted to incorporate art,” says WVAC President & CEO Julie Richard. “I had seen the Margaret Mee exhibit at the Field Museum in Chicago and it left a distinct impression on me.” She felt botanical arat would be a perfect match for this festival. Richard opened the botanical art competition to artists outside the WVAC membership. This botanical exhibit will be repeated annually. Members of SWSBA attended a meeting at the Art Institute of the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum (ASDM) in Tucson, to learn about the latest projects of The Sonoran Desert Florilegium Program (www.sonorandesertflorilegium.org). Margaret Pope, chair of the Program’s steering committee, tells us, “The goals of the Florilegium Program are to collect, exhibit, and archive historical, contemporary, and future botanical art of the Sonoran Desert flora. Among our first activities was to accession, archive and scan over 1300 pen and ink illustrations at the University of Arizona Herbarium.” This treasure trove of illustrations was in disarray, hidden away where no one could see them. Many of the illustrations are by Lucretia Breazeale Hamilton, an internationally regarded botanical illustrator of the plants of the region. The Florilegium Program now seeks contemporary artworks. Scientifically accurate color pieces depicting plants including mountain, riparian and grassland areas within and adjacent to the region are sought. An exhibit at the ASDM Ironwood Gallery from September 14–October 27, 2013: Botanical Art of the Sonoran Desert: Past and Present, is in the works (See Calls for Entries on page 26). Marina parryi, Parry’s False Prairie-clover, 11x14”, pen and ink, ©Susan E. Ashton 2012 (Continued on Page 28) TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 27 HAPPENINGS..., CONTINUED (Continued from Page 27) As an adjunct to exhibition activities, in March, Dr. Judy Kula, Phoenix College Art Instructor, who has exhibited nationally, provided a workshop for SWSBA on the jury process for exhibitions. SWSBA members experienced the challenge of being jurors in an exercise using numerous traditional and contemporary botanical artworks. This was followed by Lynn Reves, SWSBA President, presenting an April session on how to frame art to sell. Reves has extensive experience framing in a retail setting, and the topic dovetailed nicely into the activities and needs of members with planned events still to come. Florida Society of Botanical Artists Exhibition Edible Plants Illustrated Vi and Dick Strain, Ginny Spencer, Krista Anandakuttan, Joan Diblin, Kristen Jakob and Melinda Pahl a botanical artist’s delight! Live flowering plants – primrose, yarrow, violas and lobelias – and Bonnie Bonner’s real live Bug Motel stood out among four thousand people and 60 exhibits at Infineon Raceway. Kids stepped up to the microscope and saw leaf details on the laptop. Some sat down and colored drawings of the live plants. Others were dazzled by the botanical art and our exciting art form. Parents asked how to get our program into local schools. This was a terrific chance to get botanical art to a new audience. A SBA Artist’s Circle, the Botanical Art Society of the National Capital Region, presented a 6-week exhibition of members’ artworks in March and April. Submissions were juried by Marcia DeWitt for The Garden Path, held at The Athenaeum, which opened the exhibition with a wellattended artist’s reception on Sunday, March 18. Karen Coleman presented a gallery talk, The Path of Botanic Art. The event included a special children’s workshop titled Flowers, Textures and Leaves, open to the public, for a day in April. O pening at the Venice Art Center, Venice, Florida on April 7, this exhibit ran through May 4, 2012. Botanical art today is enjoying a renaissance , and although it often depicts far-flung marvels of the botanical world, this exhibition, consisting of the works of 15 contemporary botanical artists illustrates some common and uncommon plants that people use for food. The role of botanical art is to blend the scientific study of plants with their artistic presentation. The 38 Fragaria x ananassa, cv Albion, watercolor on works of art in watercolor, paper: ©Susan Benjamin 2012 colored pencil, graphite and silverpoint demonstrate the variety of media employed and the skills of the chapter’s botanical artists. Margaret Johnston Begins Botanical Art Project for Naturopathy M argaret Johnston, a new member, recently spent six months in Cape Town, South Africa, studying native medicinal plants. A naturopathic doctor and educator, she has combined her interests in naturopathy and botanical illustration. Joining the Botanical Artists Association of South Africa (BAASA) at the Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens was a foot in the door to all kinds of botanically related activities. It allowed her into the Gardens whenever she wanted to continue her studies. Margaret will return for another six months in the coming year to continue her work on the naturopathic botanical art project she started this year. B Sutherlandia frutescens; From Flower to Fruit, 35x50cm, watercolor on paper, ©Margaret Elizabeth Johnston. Sutherlandia has been used and respected as a medicinal plant by the Khoi San and Nama people, the original inhabitants of the Cape. NorCal Chapter Rubs Shoulders with Bay Area Scientists and Fans efore the holiday rush in early November, the Northern California Chapter of the ASBA delighted children and parents alike at The Bay Area Science Festival. The Festival inspired families – mostly kids – with interactive, hands-on science exploration and fun. Nodding heads and bright eyes with lots of questions made the day for volunteers Bernard Halliwell, Joanne Palamountain, 28 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 Artists’ Circle Presents Members’ Works at the Athenaeum in Alexandria, VA Promotional card features Pink Magnolia (detail), 20x24”, colored pencil on colored paper, ©Merri Nelson, 2012 B Lizabeth Leech Authors Botany Guide for Botanical Artists rought up in Hong Kong and Singapore among many exotic plants, at an early age Lizabeth knew that plants delighted and fascinated her. Whatever she did in the future, she knew plants would be involved. She trained as a botanist and ecologist, and taught biology for 20 years, then moving into research, in soft fruit breeding, and improving frost hardiness in fast growing tree species. In 2002, after turning to her love of art, she enrolled in the English Gardening School’s Diploma Course in Botanical Art, under AnneMarie Evans, gaining her diploma in 2002. Liz has long noted that botanical artists struggle with aspects of plant identification. A founding member of the Hampton Court Palace Florilegium Society, she credits her colleagues’ many questions about botany as the final spur to create this book. Botany for Artists, published by The Crowood Press, England (www.crowood.com), is organized into 13 sections, and provides diagnostic details of many common plant features, groups and families, to provide a starting point for the botanical artist. A unique aspect of the book is Liz’s “help sheets” – forms that guide one to observe and record salient, essential details for flowering plants, while sketching flowering plants, or observing and sketching other selected specimens. You see her completed sheets, with blank help sheets to copy and use in the field in the appendix. available in the US from Trafalgar Square Publishing, Chicago, IL. Email orders should be addressed to [email protected]. (Editor’s note: also available at amazon.com) A series of columns that highlight the work of members pursuing and promoting an educational awareness of native plants through individual initiatives and projects. Here Debbie Bankert, an ASBA grant recipient, offers an account of an unusual and ambitious endeavor. The result is an artist’s journey into the mountains of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta of Colombia. The quest? To document the endemic and endangered plant species in Colombia. Not a task for the faint of heart, it is another example of a member being passionately involved with the documentation of rare and endangered species, making for a greater understanding of plant conservation and ecological challenges worldwide. Currently, I am working on a watercolor of one of the Puya bromeliad species that is difficult to reach. It grows only on steep slopes, and scooting on my derriere while hanging onto the underbrush is the only means of reaching it. Planned strategies are essential! I learned to measure with a flexible old sewing tape that allows me to maneuver around plant parts more easily than a rigid ruler. Toting an array of colored pencils I am able to create accurate colors in the field, to inform final color choices in the studio. Clear shipping tape was a huge success! I taped down flower or bract parts on sketch pads, preserving details and color. For rare plants like the Puya, I collect only a single flower, and dozens of photos, for details. My first trip in November, 2009, allowed me to capture several bromeliad varieties, in graphite and colored pencil. I quickly learned that finished paintings would have to be done at home, as the climate in that season is too humid for watercolor. On a subsequent trip in February, 2012, weather conditions were much drier and allowed opportunities for watercolor. However, favorable weather conditions brought birders from across the globe, and the Lodge teemed with activity. So, whether from problems of dampness, being overrun with birders, or the tediousness of applying thin layers of color hoping for sufficient dry time, I found that final work was better managed in my Virginia studio. Days begin early to avoid being caught in the descending clouds, rains or thunderstorms. The early daylight filtering through forests left me amazed by changing colors, depth of field and differing scenes within the same location. Guzmania pallida is a watercolor where I wanted to capture this ethereal feeling, showing deep darkness paired with bright light within the same frame. In Tillandsia sigmoidea and Santa Marta Parakeet (the parrot is also endemic and endangered), a more spectacular bromeliad is shown. Found in abundance on the higher ridges, it’s seldom found on lower ones. The specimen I used was found on a lower ridge in high grasses laced with rusting barbed wire. This area is in an invasive Mexican pine forest that is wreaking havoc in the delicate ecosystem. We pursued my desired specimen through a tunnel created by plant life that opened onto a precipice. Overlooking trees that appeared as small broccoli far below, the trail was difficult due to the steep decline down the mountain side. We quickly collected the documentation needed, retracing our steps, hurrying to avoid approaching cloud cover. Another challenge is being on “visual overload” at day’s end, which is challenging. However, the rhythm of keeping my nights available to journal, mornings available for exploration, and afternoons for sketches and artwork is seductive and makes up for the challenging circumstances. The days spent in the rhythm needed are idyllic in this little-known paradise. And I find that with my next trip planned, my anticipation grows, and the difficulties simply fade. Into Colombia’s Mountains: an Artist’s Journey By Debbie Bankert road twists on the flanks of a tropical mountain, filled with jagged rocks, fallen trees and treacherous depths, meanders through small waterfalls and leads to the most spectacular views amidst one of Earth’s rarest ecosystems. The trek, taking 2.5 to 3 hours in a fourwheel drive vehicle, rises from the sea to over 7000 feet in a little over 15 miles. Upon arriving at El Dorado’s Lodge, the cloud forest removes its green veil to reveal a breathtaking display of tropical color, views of mountain ranges and cities, which lie in the far distance below. The El Dorado Reserve, located in a Galapagos-like mountain range cut off from the surrounding Andes, prevents endemics from migrating and so boasts rare teeming life and beauty. While interest has been given to birds and other fauna, plants in the 2200-acre reserve have not been assessed for more than 50-100 years. These endangered species, threatened by the failure of human husbandry, are largely ignored, with lack of services, finances and interest. Working as a 2009 & 2011 ASBA Grant recipient, I research endemic and endangered plants that reside here, in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta of Clockwise from lower right: Guzmania Colombia, SA, and capture their pallida, Parallel Dimensions, watercolor on ©Debbie Bankert 2009; Debbie portraits in paint. The El paper, working on the porch at the Lodge; Debbie Dorado Reserve, one of 18 and her guide assessing a viable under the careful management approach to a perched terrestial once the cloud cover breaks, of ProAves, Inc., exists for the bromeliad; the views are breathtaking. conservation of birds and other wildlife and plants, while promoting ecotourism. My guide, an ornithologist with an interest in botany, and I have chosen the bromeliad family as a focus for study and documentation. Different epiphytic and terrestrial bromeliads are found in several forests, which demonstrate great changes from one elevation to the next. Various trips, planned around blooming seasons and prevailing seasonal weather systems, are necessary for proper identification. Knowing what actions or collection methods can be used with a given species is essential before going into the field. We are able to collect plants and parts using permission granted by the Colombian government to ProAves, Inc., our legal sheltering agent. Whenever possible, we re-plant specimens around the Lodge and cabin areas. They are thriving, provide delight to visitors and leave natural habitats untouched and well protected. I had to quickly learn methods for observation and collection in the field, while maintaining personal safety and protecting at-risk habitats and species. The underbrush is extreme, so that one must If you have a tale to tell we’d love to hear it. Please e-mail your story to use caution, and still many places are so steep and overgrown that Derek Norman at [email protected]. Please be sure to put “Wildflower Watch” in the subject line. Thank you. they are totally impregnable to human traffic. A TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 ‐ 29 WORKSHOPS These are abbreviated listings. Please be sure to go online at www.asba-art.org for full listings, including fees, class details and additional contact information. ASBA is not responsible for the accuracy of the listings content. Contact the sponsor for prerequisites, materials and other special requirements. ASBA Member Workshops Libby Kyer June 18-20 Succulents in Colored Pencil – Lush Form, Extreme Perspective & Amazing Color Brookside Gardens, Maryland Succulents are sculptural, lush, colorful and beautifully detailed. Learn new ways to interpret form and portray extreme perspective, create perfect hues and portray texture with wet and dry colored pencil application. Contact: PH: 301.962.1470, email: [email protected]: All fees and class descriptions + online registration, visit www.parkpass.org September 15, 2012 Colored Pencil on Marbledust Surfaces Art Materials Expo, Santa Fe, NM The more tools you have, the more options you have. Learn to use marbledust surfaces. You’ll find that work on this surface can be faster; toned surfaces provide visual interest and image mid-tones, line is always organic, and so much more. Materials included. Contact: www.expoartisan.com ASBA Institutional Member Workshops Due to limited space in this issue because of extensive Conference listings, institutional members class listings for summer classes will appear only online for this Journal. Take a moment and go to their listings at www.asba-art.org for details on their varied and interesting offers. Academy of Botanical Art 2068 Sunnyside Lane, Sarasota, Florida The Academy of Botanical Art holds regular classroom sessions in Sarasota from October to May. Distance Learning courses are offered all year long in both Botanical Art and Entomological Illustration. The Academy offers three certificate programs: 1) Botanical Art; 2) Entomological Illustration; 3) Design & Decorative Arts. Prices for classes and books are listed on the Academy Marketplace. Contact: PH: 941.953.9999.; email: [email protected] www.academyofbotanicalart.com June – September, 2012 Chicago Botanic Garden, Botanical Art Certificate of Merit 1000 Lake Cook Road, Glencoe, IL Contact: PH: 847-835-8293; email: certificateprogram@chicagobotani c.org; www.chicagobotanic.org/school/cer tificate/art July through September, 2012 Filoli Botanical Art Certificate Program 86 Canada Road, Woodside, CA 94062 Classes listed below are part of the Filoli Botanical Art Certificate Program. Enrollment in the Certificate Program is not necessary to participate however, prerequisites must be completed. Contact: PH: 650.364.8300 x 508; email: [email protected]; website: www.filoli.org June-September 2012 Friends of Wellesley College Botanic Gardens Formerly known as “Wellesley College Friends of Horticulture” 106 Central Street, Wellesley, MA We offer a Certificate in Botanical Art and Illustration Contact: PH: 781.283.3094; email: [email protected]; www.wellesley.edu/wcbgfriends July 9 - 13, 2012 The NY Botanical Garden Botanical Drawing I 2900 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, NY Contact: PH: 718.8178720.; email: [email protected]; www.nybg.org JOIN THROUGH A CHAPTER! onsider joining through your local chapter. You'll receive all C the benefits of national membership plus added chapter benefits such as local workshops, exhibitions, support, chapter website and other activities. Please note that you will pay both chapter dues (contact the chapter for current rate) and national dues (at a discounted rate.) Allegheny Highlands - Amanda Zimmerman, [email protected] The Botanical Artists Guild of Southern California Leslie Walker, [email protected] Florida Society of Botanical Artists - Susan Benjamin, [email protected] Great River Chapter - Nancy Gehrig, [email protected] New England Society of Botanical Artists - Nancy Savage, [email protected] Northern California Society of Botanical Artists - Sally Petru, [email protected] Pacific Northwest Botanical Artists - Wanda Booth, [email protected] Rocky Mountain Society of Botanical Artists - Dorothy DePaulo, [email protected] Southwest Society of Botanical Artists - Lynn Reves, [email protected] Artists’ Circles These Circles provide peer interaction and support for ASBA member artists who are not yet interested in chapter formation. If you are interested in forming a chapter or Artists' Circle, please contact Terry Ruiter, Chapter Liaison at [email protected] or at PH: 303.798.9452. Idaho Inland Pacific Northwest PH:208.267.1423 Linda Wolfe [email protected] Illinois The Reed-Turner Botanical Artists, Chicago Ann Lesciotto [email protected] www.reedturnerbotanicalartists.net St. Louis, Missouri, Southern Illinois Jody Williams [email protected] Maryland, Virginia, District of Columbia Botanical Art Society of the National Capital Region Pamela Mason [email protected] www.basncr.org Maryland Chesapeake Circle of Botanical Artists Dori Novak [email protected] Greater New Jersey Mid Atlantic Society of Botanical Artists Ann Hoffenberg [email protected] FLORA, Long Island, NY Irene Messina [email protected] Portland, Oregon - Southern Washington Connie Ratti PH: 503.620.5141 [email protected] Austin, Texas Sally Fraser PH:512.447.2284 [email protected] Central Virginia Botanical Artists Celeste Johnson [email protected] Planning ahead? Here’s the ASBA Meeting and Conference schedule for the next three years. Hope to see you! u2012, Chicago, IL, October 18 - 20 u2013, Pittsburgh, PA, September 26 - 28, with 14th Hunt International Exhibition u2014, Denver, CO, October 16 - 18, for the ASBA 20th Anniversary 30 ‐ TBA ~ VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 ‐ JUNE 2012 The World is Looking at the ASBA Members’ Gallery at www.asba-arts.org To have your botanical artwork shown in the ASBA Members’ Gallery, please visit www.asba-art.org, select Gallery, then Gallery Guidelines under Member Gallery. SUGGESTION BOX If you have an idea that would enrich the experience of ASBA Membership, please send it to: [email protected]. Be sure to put “Suggestion Box” in the subject line. Yours may be the next great idea! Membership Application/Renewal embership in ASBA is open to all individuals and institutions worldwide who are interested in botanical art. Annual fees are based on the calendar year, with all membership renewals due in January. Membership benefits include: s4 issues of The Botanical Artist Journal, which includes the annual directory volume for networking with members in your area and worldwide sEligibility to enter ASBA juried exhibitions and participate in invitational exhibits sEligibility to present your work online at the ASBA website sAnnouncements of your exhibitions, workshops, events or group activities published in The Botanical Artist as space allows. sEligibility to attend the Annual Meeting and Conference. sEligibility for membership in regional chapters sEligibility for ASBA awards. You may join ASBA directly or through a local chapter (see p. 30). To become a member of ASBA or to renew your national membership, please complete the following form and enclose it with your membership fee in an envelope addressed to: M Deadlines for Submission For The Botanical Artist Volume 18, Issue 3 - September, Deadline August 6, 2012 Volume 18, Issue 4 - December, Deadline November 5, 2012 Volume 19, Issue 1 - March, Deadline February 1, 2013 Volume 19, Issue 2 - June, Deadline May 1, 2013 Submission Guidelines: Articles, calls for entries, exhibition notices, artworks and other items of interest to ASBA members may be submitted by any member for inclusion in The Botanical Artist. All submissions should be sent to the editor on submission forms available at amsocbotartists.org. Email completed forms to Libby Kyer, [email protected]. Dated entries must be resubmitted each quarter if repeat inclusion is desired. Do not submit original photos, slides, prints or illustrations as they will not be returned. All submissions are published at the editor’s discretion on a spaceavailable basis, and are subject to editing. 10th ASBA/HSNY (52pp) 12th ASBA/HSNY (58 pp.) 13th ASBA/HSNY (60 pp) Small Works 2011: Order your print-ondemand Legacy/Phoenix catalog from Blurb.com at Exhibitions www.blurb.co (72 pp.) m/bookstore/d etail/2532414 American Society of Botanical Artists at NYBG, 2900 Southern Blvd., Bronx NY 10458-5126. Please print clearly, Detach and Mail Name:__________________________________________ Address:_______________________________________ City:______________________State/Province:_______ ZIP/Postal Code _______________ Country:________ Home PH:______________________________________ Work PH: ______________________________________ Email:__________________________________________ Website:________________________________________ Please print clearly. Your information will be published in the Annual Members Directory unless you check here to decline: qPlease do not list me in the directory. 2012 Membership Dues: Individual Member: USq$85 Non-US q$100 Institutional Member: USq$150 Institutional Member Non-US q$175 Please Help by Giving a Donation The basic membership dues (above) cover only a portion of ASBA's operating expenses. We invite you to make a donation in addition to your dues, if you can. ASBA is a non-profit, tax-exempt organization. Your support will be gratefully acknowledged in the "Thank You" issue of the Journal. Please accept my donation in addition to my annual dues (above) in the category of: qFriend $40 - 99 qContributor: $100 - 249 qSupporter $250 - 499 qSponsor $500 - 999 qOther________________________________________ Total amount enclosed: ________________________ 14th ASBA/HSNY (58 pp.) Losing Paradise? (116 pp) Reduced Price: $20 Colorful Edibles ASBA Coloring Book (28 pp) Green Currency (64 pp) Reduced Price: $25. To order, go to www.nybgshop.org /Green-Currency-p22004 ArtPlantae Books - your official source for ASBA Catalogs! We are pleased that ArtPlantae Books, a respected name in botanical art education and as a book distributor, will fulfill your orders. For fastest service and easiest ordering, please order with your credit card directly from the ArtPlantae website at www.ArtPlantaeBooks.com. Click on “ASBA Exhibition Catalogs.” and complete order form. ASBA members receive the Losing Paradise? catalog for $20 (Reg. $29.95). Please write “ASBA Member” in the Comment Box during checkout (or on your check). Or send this order form, with check written to ArtPlantae Books to: ArtPlantae Books, 5225 Canyon Crest Drive, Ste 71-127, Riverside, CA 92507. Order Form for ASBA Exhibition Catalogs and Coloring Book r14th ASBA/HSNY #____x US $20.00 r13th ASBA/HSNY, #____x US $20.00 rLosing Paradise? #____x US $20.00 r12th ASBA/HSNY, #____x US $20.00 rLegacy/Phoenix , #____x US $20.00 r10th ASBA/HSNY, #____x US $15.00 rColorful Edibles #____x US $8.99 Total number ordered: Total amount for catalogs: = = = = = = = = = _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ (NY residents add 7.375% /CA residents add 7.75%) Sales Tax = _________ *S&H: US, $5.25, add $1.25 each additional book.* Total S&H = _________ Total amount enclosed: = _________ Name:________________________________________________________________________________________ Address: _____________________________________________________________________________________ City: _________________________________________________State:___________________________________ Country: _____________________________________ZIP: ____________________________________________ Email: ___________________________________________________________________________ *International mail order customers will be contacted with shipping and handling costs TBA ~ VOLUME 17‐4 DECEMBER 2011 ‐ 31 at NYBG 2900 Southern Blvd. Bronx NY 10458-5126 The History of Botanical Art By Jutta Buck n the late 17th and early 18th centuries, Johann Jacob Dillenius (1687-1747) was noteworthy for the drawings and etchings illustrating his Hortus Elthamensis (1732). However, another vast effort in publishing botanical books looms large, carried out by Johann Wilhelm Weinmann(1683-1741) whose eight volumes of the Phytanthoza Iconographia were printed in Augsburg from 1735-1745. With 1025 copper engravings depicting over 4000 figures of plants printed in color and finished by hand, it is a massive tour de force. Still another popular work of the period was that of Mrs. Elizabeth Blackwell (c17001758), with the refreshing title A Curious Herbal, published in London from 1737 to 1739 featuring her own drawings and engravings. Illustrated treatises pertaining to subjects of natural science now began to appear regularly, reflecting the intellectual curiosity of naturalists, botanists and artists, who were captivated by the latest discoveries I made by explorers returning from their most recent expeditions. This curiosity was applied to the exact study of materials both familiar and those more recently discovered. In this connection, the Swedish botanist and taxonomist Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778), considered as the founder of modern scientific classification of plants and animals, published his Genera Plantarum in 1737, which described plants in rigorous detail in terms of their gender and species. In his lifetime, Linnaeus published more than 180 works, and for many years thereafter exerted a major influence on botanists. In our time, recent advances in the study of natural science are redefining how plants are grouped, due to DNA and other newly discovered details, are leading to methods of defining taxa and grouping them. Jacobaea Africana annua minor and Jacobaea Africana frutescens folius absynthia, by Johann Wilhelm Weinmann in Phytanthoza Iconographia, Folio 4 c. 1740