Friday, November 16, 2012
CVABA at the VMFA for FA&F!
Fine Art and Flowers at the VMFA (by Judy Thomas)
The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts http://www.vmfa.state.va.us/Default.aspx has an exhibit every other year, Fine Arts and Flowers. For the exhibit, which occurs over a long weekend, the VMFA invites area garden clubs to create a floral work that somehow represents, symbolizes, interprets or echoes a pre-selected group of art work at the museum. These garden clubs go all out to create floral masterpieces! For a view and details of works from the most recent show, go to https://vmfa.box.com/s/d517331ac9495203e015/1/453849957
Our group, pictured above, was delighted with the exhibit, lead by docent, CVABA member and Ginter Gardens Botanical Illustration Program teacher, Celeste Johnston. I thought I would like the interpretation of traditional art the best, but it was the modern art-related floral arrangements that most caught my imagination, though all were lovely, using wonderful materials. I snapped a few photos with my Ipad, and two of the modern interpretations came out well. Group members, comprised of botanical illustrators and artists, were delighted to see the art and flowers. I felt the floral arrangements helped me appreciate the art in a a new way!
Look for this exhibit in 2014!
"Earth laughs in flowers." Ralph Waldo Emerson
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Botanical Needle Arts
Other Media: Botanical Needle Art
by Judy Thomas
When I first started botanical illustration/art classes, I was quickly disabused of the notion that this type of art was pretty much restricted to watercolor. Botanical artists use many media, including watercolor, graphite, pen and ink, colored ink, oil paint, gouache, pastel and colored pencil. I also discovered that many of my fellow artists were also fiber or needle artists as well, and incorporated botanical images into their work. This inspired me to attempt botanical illustration in a needle art with which I am familiar: needle felting.
Anne McCahill is working on a large project to create large panels of plants and pollinators. She is creating botanical art using embroidery:
Anne McCahill "Coneflower and Bee"
As well as smaller, decorative works:
Anne McCahill "Ixara and Monarch"
Anne works in muslin, duck cotton, and linen. As she writes "I used my lightbox to
draw the outline and painted very diluted shades of the various colors
for the design. [For the stitching] DMC floss works well, mostly using 1 strand for finer
texture and detail... It really parallels sketching or painting, needing
as much patience as the other techniques. The DMC color
chart offers lots of shades, but it would be rewarding to create
botanical hand dyed shades, a project in the offing." Anne also writes "beginners
in stitchery would like Needle Painting Embroidery. Fresh Ideas for
Beginners (Milner Craft Series), available at Amazon."
I am also attempting to use needle arts to create botanically-inspired work. Currently, I am finishing an illustration of cattails, also known as bulrush, in needle-felted wool. I sketched the cattails both in graphite and color pencil.
Judy Thomas "Typha latifolia" in colored pencil and graphite
I am now "sketching" it in wool. It is difficult to be as accurate with wool as with graphite or colored pencil, so compromises must be made, while trying to stay as botanically "true" the plant as possible.
Judy Thomas "Typha latifolia" in wool
The Royal Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh, Scotland incorporates fiber arts into their program, including needle felting, web felting, natural dyed fibers and paper making.
http://www.rbge.org.uk/whats-on/events&category=8&category=8&category=8&category=8&category=8&category=8&p=1
On Nov. 3 and 10, 2012, and February 2 and 16, 2013 I am teaching 2-day, beginning needle-felting classes for botanical artists at Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens. We will learn how to create flat and dimensional botanical art composition in colorful wools, with the conventions of botanical illustration as our guide. I hope the course will be repeated regularly. Go to www.lewisginter.org for more information.
“...the true secret of happiness lies in the taking a genuine interest in all the details of daily life...”
-William Morris
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