Saturday, May 31, 2014

SBA Assignment Botanical Illustration

Botanical Illustration Assignment #9
Strelitzia reginae
 
The assignment called for an accurate depiction of size, form and colour, showing a single species with foliage with a dissection shown.
 
I am lucky enough to have dozens of Strelitzia reginae growing in my garden, which bloom year round in sunny Southern California.  This allowed me to cut new flowers at all stages of growth throughout the 2 months of drawing. 
And yes, it did take me 2 full months, though I am slow :)
The dissection was a new adventure for me, with each one I picked having different number of Sepals and Petals.
 
 
Took one of the birds completely apart and layed it all out and numbered each layer.
There are really a lot of layers inside each beak.
 
 
One of my sketchbook pages, practicing with colours and techniques.
 
 
Discection of Strelitzia sexual organs
 
 
 
Completed Assignment!
 
 
Tutors comments abbreviated:
Good tones in the leaf and on the stems.  I would have liked to see a little more depth in the orange petals but it's nothing major.  You can take a bit of artistic license to accentuate the darker areas in order to make the areas in the foreground look closer.
 
Love the composition.  It's perfect for the plant!
 
Final Mark
 
9.75

 
REALLY happy with my marks, love these birds!



Saturday, May 24, 2014

My Travels to England 2014

Dedham, England
 
Spending a week in Dedham at Dedham Hall is one of my most favorite things to do.  A week filled with friends, working on my botanical art and discovering the surrounding area is just amazing. 
Ann Swan our art tutor is such a great artist and teacher and someone I can call my friend. 
 
 
Dedham Hall & Fountain House
 
Our days start with a brisk walk on the surrounding footpaths in what as known as Constable Country.  John Constable, known for his famous paintings of the mills in the area.
 
Some of us walkers!
 
 
Flatford Mill
 
Then we all meet in the dining room for a full English Breakfast.  Then off to the studio, and our days are draw, tea, draw, lunch, draw, tea, draw, with a lot of conversation and laughter in between.
 
Artists hard at work.
 
Take a bit of a break and meet up again in the dining room for dinner and more conversation and laughter.  After dinner it's off to the lounge for tea and snacks, more conversation and laughter.
 
 
A cookie bouquet for Ann's birthday!
 
By then we are all exhausted from the day, so it's off to bed.  The day repeats for a full week.  It's always so sad to say goodbye to my English friends, I really love it there.
 
 
One of the days, Janie and I went sightseeing to Lavenham and out to English Tea.
Thank you Janie for a wonderful afternoon!
 
 
 
Air New Zealand Boeing 777 The Hobbit
 
Long flight home, but I'll be back next month!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 









Thursday, March 27, 2014

SBA Assignment #8 Composition - Vegetable Study

Assignment #8 Vegetable Study
 
The first question you ask is "Why use a Tomato, it's a Fruit"
and yes, you are correct.  The SBA allows us to use a tomato as a fruit or vegetable since it is used as a vegetable in salads.  So, no points lost there!
 
Solanum lycopersicum
Heirloom Tomato
'Claurina', 'Montenegro', 'Tomawah'
 
 
Purchase my three tomatoes at Whole Foods.  Figured out the composition and started drawing as much as I could without having the stems.  The stems and leaves are taken off the fruit before they are shipped to the stores.
 
 
 
Once I got as much drawn as I could I went on a tour of Houwelings Tomatoes. 
One of the largest growers of Heirloom Tomatoes. 
The Mastery Under Glass is located only 20 minutes from my home.
 
 
All the tomatoes are grown hydroponically in huge glass greenhouses.  This place is amazing!
 
 
You have to suit up in clean suits to enter the facility.
Me and Kyle, our tour director.
Aren't we cute!
 
 
Once home with my stems, leaves and tons of photographs, I quickly started my stems. 
Carefully placing them and completing my assignment.
 
 
The finished product and yes these Toms are huge!
 
My tutor commented that "I think you took me quite literally when I mentioned about small subjects in your last assignment.  I am amused!  These are so big - and I've no doubt tasted delicious.
 
Condensed tutor comments:
Wow!  Big Tomatoes
These tomatoes look touchable - excellent.
Your composition is fine Lori.  The three tomatoes work together really well - but have to admit it would have been lovely to see inside one of them - just because I am interested and, therefore, I expect others would be too.  It would have added even more interest but I can imagine they are very complicated inside and maybe time wasn't on your side. 
 
 
Final Mark 9.35
 
As always, I was nervous about my marks.  One because I only had three subjects and the composition was pretty standard.  Yes, I would have loved to drawn the inside, but time is of the essence and I never seem to have enough.  I am learning with each assignment and am looking forward to our next assignment 'Botanical Illustration'

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Sarah Simblet and The New Sylva

Master Class in Drawing at Cal Lutheran University
in Thousand Oaks,  California
March 12, 2014
 
I was lucky enough to attend this Master Class with Sarah Simblet.  Sarah is the director of drawing at Oxford's Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art. 
She has published three books:
"Anatomy for the Artist", "The Drawing Book" and "Botany for the Artist.
Her latest endeavor, "The New Sylva", a celebration of trees and forests is an updated version of the book written in the seventeenth century "The Sylva" by John Evelyn.
 
 
 
The New Sylva by Gabriel Hemery & Sarah Simblet
Sarah's first copy of the book for review. 
Really amazing publication for both Arborists and Artists.
 
 
The class started out in a classroom at Cal Lutheran University.  Sarah spoke of her making of the book and the 200 Pen and Ink Botanical drawings that make up the book.
 
 
She was able to bring along a couple dozen lithographs of her work from the book
and many original sketches of details.
 
 
Her work is truly amazing to see in person. 
 
 
Sarah explaining the process of two years of drawing trees.
 
 
 
Sarah explaining the process of learning how a tree moves in the wind.
"You have to get to know your tree, circle it, touch it, smell it."
 
 
 
She brought along some of the large offset pages from the printing of the book.
 
 
After the classroom portion of the class, we all went outside to pick a tree to sketch. 
Hard to do with all those leaves on the tree.  It's much easier when the tree is bare, but here in California and our warm weather, most of the trees don't loose their trees for long.
 
More information on Sarah Simblet
 
The New Sylva can be purchase at Amazon
 

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden

 BAGSC
Botanical Art Guild of Southern California
 
Took a break from my SBA assignment to go to the
BAGSC quarterly meeting and get together at the
Ranch Santa Ana Botanic Garden in Claremont, California
March 2014
 
 
 
The garden covers 86 acres in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains
and is the largest botanical garden of California Natives
 
 
 Our group was fortunate enough to have a 2 hour guided tour of the garden with Eric Garton, one of the directors of the garden.  He was so knowledgeable of all the plants and animals in the garden. 
 
 
Beautiful shaded pathways along the way
 
 

Dendromecon harfordii   Channel Island tree poppy
 
 
Eschscholzia californica  California Poppy
  
 
Calliandra eriophylla  Fairy duster
 
 
Garra elliptica   silk tassel
 
Nolina parryi  parry beargrass
 
Cactus Family of flowers:
 
 
 
Cylindropuntia echinocarpa  silver cholla
 
 
Opuntia erinacea var. erinacea  Mojave Prickly-Pear
 

 
Echinocerus triglochidiatus Mound Cactus
 
 
OK, that was enough fun for the day.  Nice to take a break now and then to spend time with friends and fellow botanical artists.
Now it's back to the drawing board. 
Gotta have my assignment done by Wednesday and posted to my tutor in the UK.
 
Wish me luck!
 
 
 
Another great day in sunny Southern California!
 
 

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Houwling's Tomatoes

Tour of Houwling's Tomatoes
Mastery Under Glass
 
125 acres under greenhouse glass and the California sun produces delicious varieties of tomatoes in an array of colors, shapes and sizes 52 weeks a year.
 
View of the Heirloom Tomato Glass Greenhouse
 
Tomato vines grown hydroponically
 
Heirloom Tomatoes waiting to be packed and shipped
 
Don't I look cute in my clean suit? 
I was lucky enough to have some leaves picked from the vines.
 
 
Thanks Kyle for the Grand Tour!
 
 
While deciding what to paint for my next assignment and searching my garden and local markets, I am always drawn to Heirloom Tomatoes.  Their various shapes and colors have always intrigued me.  I purchased a few fun looking shapes, color and sizes, for quite a lot of money I might add, brought them home and started in on my sketchbook.    I like to make my sketches into greeting cards, so my first attempt at a Heirloom Tomato was for my Valentine's Greeting Card
 
Now that I've got some good pictures of the stems and leaves of these tomatoes, I can continue on with my assignment. 
 
Here is a sneak peak of my assignment:
 
 
Lots of pretty colors happening!
Still have a lot of coloring to do, but now I have a lot of pictures,
stems and leaves to use for reference. 
 
 
Check Back to see my final artwork!
 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, February 3, 2014

SBA Assignment #7 Composition 2 - Fruit Study

Carissa macrocarpa  (Natal Plum)
A shrub native to South Africa, where it is commonly called the Large Num-Num. In Zulu, as well as in the Bantu tribes of Uganda, it is called amatungulu. In Afrikaans the fruit is called Noem-NoemC. macrocarpa deals well with salt-laden winds, making it a good choice for coastal areas. It is commonly found in the coastal bush of the Eastern Cape and Natal.  It produces shiny, deep green leaves and snowy white flowers whose perfumed scent intensifies at night. Like other Carissa species, C. macrocarpa is a spiny, evergreen shrub containing latex. They bloom for months at a time. The ornamental plump, round, crimson fruit appears in summer and fall (autumn) at the same time as the blooms. In moderate, coastal areas the fruits appear through the year. The fruit can be eaten out of hand or made into pies, jams, jellies, and sauces.  Some claim that other than the fruit, the plant is poisonous.  However this claim is a myth, possibly based on similarities to other plants with milky sap.  The California Poison Control System rates the plant as mildly toxic.


When starting an assignment, I always try to pick my material based on something everyone else isn't going to pick, something colorful, and something I am growing or easily accessible.  What I really wanted to pick was a big pile of walnuts.  Unfortunately, when I was going to go pick them from a local walnut grove, there had been large winds the week before, which stripped the trees of their fruit. 
So, while on my weekly walks, I always pass a home that has a long hedge of Natal Plums growing.  They always seem to be fruiting, and have always caught my eye, wondering what they were.
I then brought some home, contacted the homeowner to see if she knew what they were called, and started sketching.  Unfortunately the homeowner and the local nursery did not know what they were.  I then posted a picture of the fruit on the facebook page Botany Today, asked if anyone knew what it was called and within minutes, I had my answer.
I then started in on my sketchbook work, it was just before the winter holidays, so I figured I would use my tine to draw a holiday greeting card for friends and family.

Many hours later, here is the outcome .............................


On to my assignment..................................
 
 

 
Condensed notes from my tutor:
An unusual subject, and new to me, so I thank you for showing me something I've not seen before.
This piece is so neat and accurate.
Tone on your leaves is lovely and the fruit shows up so well in front of them.  You lost a few points because of the dissected fruit, as it looks flat.  Had you shown just a small portion of the skin as well as the centre of the fruit you could have overcome this. 
I don't dislike your composition but you could have made it more interesting by adding a couple of other images, maybe a completely different fruit.  (Hmmmmm really, a different fruit, I would never have done this)
 
A small note at the end of her assessment.  Your work reflects you, small and neat, that's fine, but large subjects or more of the smaller ones is required.  I don't want to see the paper crammed full of stuff if had these had been eating apples it would have been perfect.  In other words, these are very small so either choose larger subjects or do more if they're small.  Also, when cutting a subject in half be careful if you choose to draw it straight-on.  Unless it has something visible to show its form then tip it slightly to show the shape (I like this tip and will definitely remember it)
 
  
 
 
Happy with my marks and will take what my tutor noted in her assessment and learn from it for the next assignment.
 
 
mark 9.26
 
 
 
Thanks for visiting my blog....
On to the Vegetable Assignment...............