Showing posts with label RHS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RHS. Show all posts

Monday, October 04, 2021

RHS Botanical Art & Photography Show - extended until 9th October 2021

This is a summary of the blog posts I've written recently - on my website Botanical Art and Artists - about the RHS Botanical Art & Photography Show 2021


This show normally lasts for 2 days in one of the RHS Horticultural Halls in Victoria - and attracts exhibitors and visitors from all over the world. 

Featuring more than 200 of the best botanical artwork and garden photography by 34 global artists, all competing for an RHS Medal.
Last year - like many other annual exhibitions - it was cancelled.

This year, it had to change the way it worked - and moved to the Saatchi Gallery in Chelsea - for three weeks. It was initially two weeks but the show has been extended to Saturday 9th October.

These are my blog posts reviewing the medals awarded, the two shows and the changes in 2021 - and what needs to happen in future - in reverse chronological order


I'm really pleased that the RHS managed to get an exhibition up and running despite the many very significant challenges. 

However the show was VERY quiet and there were no artists - or as one visitor put it
A very different venue to the usual Lindley Hall and the exhibits looked very good in the setting. Missed the atmosphere though, along with chatting to the artists and more information provided about each exhibit.
I think it's a big mistake to consider this show to be an exhibition - as opposed to an EVENT which includes an exhibition.
 
Or as I said in my overview post
My main concern for the future is that the RHS gets back to remembering that this is NOT JUST AN EXHIBITION!

This is very emphatically an EVENT i.e. PEOPLE (not just artwork) come too, to:
  • meet up with other botanical artists and photographers
  • talk to the people exhibiting 
  • talk to one another - many make plans to meet up with people from all over the country and have lunch or dinner afterwards
  • sell (and buy) artwork, prints and cards
  • network, network, network to plan future projects, exhibits etc
It's this networking and making connections aspect which helps raise the standard of botanical art. It's hugely important to the wellbeing of the genre.

Note the difference between the Installation Views - and photos in my posts and this video of the show in the Lindley Hall in 2017

For all those who follow Botanical Art 

Thursday, July 25, 2019

Award winners at the RHS Botanical Art Show 2019

Botanical artists from all over the world who compete for medals at the Royal Horticultural Society's Botanical Art equivalent of the Chelsea Flower Show have to work very hard for their medals and have five years from being approved to exhibit to get it right for a 2.5 day exhibition.

Judges are not satisfied with one painting. They want six - on a theme, botanically accurate and correct, constructed using artistic skills and with a visually aesthetic appeal.

View of some of the exhibits of six (typically watercolour) paintings of plants on a theme at the RHS Botanical Art Show

BELOW are images of the Major Awards

You can also
The Gold Medals were split between:
  • 5 UK Artists (4 English and 1 Scottish)
  • 4 Japanese artists 
  • a group of Russian Artists

The exhibition at the RHS London Botanical Art and Photography Show is open today and closes at 5pm. It's in the RHS Lindley Hall in Elverton Street in Westminster.

Best Botanical Painting 2019


Mariko Ikeda (GM 2017 and Best Exhibit 2017) - Pandanus tectorius of Micronesian Atoll (Watercolour on vellum)

Mariko lives in Tokyo. She has a Ph.D. in the Sciences of Art (2009) and has been a Botanical Art Instructor in Tokyo since 2006. In terms of previous awards she has
  • won 1st Prize (twice) at the Botanical Art Competition run by the National Museum of Nature and Science in Tokyo.
  • won a Gold Medal for her exhibit of Pandanus at the RHS Botanical Art Show in 2017 and was also awarded Best Exhibit in show.
  • this year won another Gold Medal and Best Painting.
Best Botanical Painting: Mariko Ikeda : P.Tectorius ‘En Khelen’

Mariko Ikeda GM (2017 + Best Exhibit, 2019 + Best Painting) Pandanus tectorius of Micronesia

Best Exhibit 2019


Naomi Gumma (Japan) - A Gift from the Gods: The Life Cycle of the Shimonita Welsh Onion (Tempera on paper)

This is Naomi's first visit to RHS and she has won a Gold Medal and Best Exhibit!  She also dressed in sync with her plant!

Best Botanical Art Exhibit 2019: Naomi Gumma GM (2019): The Lifecycle of the Shimonita Welsh Onion



Judges Special Award 2019

Betsy Rogers-Knox: Exploring the Seasons at Beckley Bog

This was awarded because of the significant educational value of Betsy' watercolour paintings about bog plants growing in a specific environment.

Exploring the Seasons at Beckley Bog - The Botany and Beauty of Vascular Plants and Bog Benefits
Betsy Rogers-Knox

Judges’ Special Award 2019: Betsy Rogers-Knox

[NOTE: Most of my writing about botanical art is now on my Botanical Art and Artists website - and I'm currently writing up this year's awards - and TIPS -  from the RHS London Art and Photography Competition 2019 on my news blog - which you can subscribe to if interested]

Wednesday, July 24, 2019

I'm at the RHS Botanical Art Show all week


Apologies to those who are expecting the next instalment of my review of the BP Portrait Award but I haven't quite finished it and I'm now at or occupied with the RHS Botanical Art Show (RHS London Botanical Art and Photography Show) for the rest of the week - followed by lying down in a dark room for a while because I'll be out for the count!

The next instalment PART TWO - ANALYSIS & what's changed should be up on Sunday.

In the meantime if you like Botanical Art get down to the RHS Lindley Hall in Elverton Street, Westminster where you can see a fabulous international art exhibition - of botanical art - with artists who have flown in from all over the world - and RHS medals awarded for their efforts.

Here's a couple of my blog posts about it - and you can see pics from the Reception last night on my Botanical Art and Artists Facebook Page
So nice to go to an exhibition where there are clearly defined standards for the subject matter and all the judging panel include people who are botanical artists who've already won RHS Gold Medals and other experts!

Now there's an idea - create a Judging Panel for the BP Portrait Award of previous First Prize Winners!

Tuesday, July 10, 2018

A Botanical Art Bonanza!

Botanical art fans are converging on London this week for the RHS Botanical Art Show. 

In terms of handing out Gold Medals for Botanical Art this is the most prestigious botanical art show in the world.  It effect it's the visual equivalent for botanical artists of the Olympics or the World Cup! Absolutely nothing else presents the same sort of challenge!

That's why in recent days botanical artists have jetted into London from all around the globe - to try and capture that elusive RHS Gold Medal. That said, we've got quite a few Gold Medallists who are returning to see if they can enhance their credibility by winning another one!.

Medals are being awarded as I write - and I'll be there at this evening's reception.

View of part of last year's exhibition in the RHS Lindley Hall
Each of the run of panels is an exhibit of a minimum of six works by one artist
Work is graded against various criteria
- but medal colour is often determined by the weakest not the best - so everything has to be excellent!
However, while in London to see this show there is also the most fantastic opportunity to see other top class botanical art exhibitions - and this is a list of the details of everything on offer in London - in terms of botanical art!

Those pursuing other genres might pause for a moment and reflect when there were this many top class of exhibitions in prestigious venues for other subject matter!

Royal Horticultural Society


The RHS Plant and Art Fair (10-12 July 2018) includes three international exhibitions of botanical art and photography. These are:

The RHS Botanical Art Show


Venue: RHS Lindley Hall, Elverton Street,
Dates: 10-12 July 2018

For more information:
Plus this is information about how the RHS Botanical Art Show works for those aspiring to show in 2020 (you're already too late for 2019!). It's the only show I know where you have to be approved BEFORE you can submit your artwork
This is also a show where it pays to sort your visa out in good time..... It loosk like we might have lost one exhibitor to visa problems at the UK end.... - which will be very disappointing

This is a video I made of last year's Botanical Art Show



The number of botanical artists this year - per country is as follows:
  • 19 x UK + 1 group
  • 7 x Japan
  • 4 x Korea
  • 2 x Italy
  • 2 x New Zealand
  • 2 x Turkey
  • and one each from Australia, Austria, Brazil, Hong Kong, Thailand and the USA​

The RHS Botanical Photography Show


Venue: RHS Lawrence Hall, Greycoat Street, Westminster
Dates: 10-12 July 2018

Polina Plotnikova - at a previous show

More information:

Worth a Thousand Words


Venue: RHS Lindley Library 80 Vincent Square LONDON SW1P 2PE
Dates: 5 July - 17 August 2018

This is the "must see" for every visitor to the Botanical Art Show - if for no other reason than it is adjacent to the show in RHS HQ in Vincent Square.

View of part of the exhibition

More information:

Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew


There are two exhibitions on display at the moment - in the same place and for the same dates.

Venue: Shirley Sherwood Gallery, Kew Gardens - which celebrated its 10th anniversary this year
​Dates: 31 March - 16 September 2018

​The Florilegium: The Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney

This is an exhibition by the Florilegium Society of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney. It was originally mounted at the RBGS Gardens in Sydney in 2016 as part of the 200th anniversary of the Botanic Gardens. ​

Part of the Florilegium exhibition at the Shirley Sherwood Gallery at Kew
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED - This is a world class exhibition and sets a very high standard for exhibitions by Florilegia

Links:


Down Under II: Works from the Shirley Sherwood Collection

The second exhibition - Down Under II: Works from the Shirley Sherwood Collection - is a follow on from the first exhibition of artwork in the Shirley Sherwood Collection of native Australian and New Zealand plants created by local and international botanical artists.

Natural History Museum


There's always an exhibition of nature botanical or natural history in the Images of Nature Gallery at the Natural History Museum
Venue: Images of Nature Gallery, Natural History Museum

The Art of British Natural History : Images of Nature

When I last visited besides the examples of botanical artwork by many of the great artists from the past there were some paintings of natural habitat by Barbara Nicolson and a reproduction of a watercolour painting of orchids by the late Pandora Sellars

Orchids (1985) by Pandora Sellars (1936-2016)

Rumanian Cultural Institute

The exhibition of botanical paintings included in the Transylvania Florilegium has returned for July and August

Jonathan Cooper Gallery


Finally for the true and dedicated fans there are some excellent artworks by botanical artiosts from England, Scotland, Australia and the USA on display at Jonathan Cooper's 30th anniversary exhibition in Chelsea



Wednesday, February 28, 2018

The RHS Botanical Art Show 2018

Usually the RHS Botanical Art Show  in London is in February. However it's been getting bigger and bigger every year and the RHS has decided to change its timing and give it more space

In 2018 it's going to be bigger still and is now on between July 10th and 12th July 2018 - at the RHS London Plant and Art Fair in the two RHS Horticultural Halls

  • the Lindley Hall, SW1P 2QW and
  • the Lawrence Hall SW1P 2QD

View of the 2017 exhibition
I've spent a lot of today (when not commenting on the snow - presence or lack of) writing a blog post about the show

Exhibiting artists at RHS Botanical Art Show 2018 contains :
  • the list of 44 artists who have been selected for a place in the exhibition. (The RHS Picture Panel judges are going to be working over time this year!)
  • organised by country of origin
  • plus profiles of each artist where available and links to their websites
  • plus images of those with a place in this year's exhibition who have previously won an RHS Gold Medal and been interviewed by me
For those of you not familiar with the exhibition it requires each artist to be:
  • vetted at least a year in advance as to whether their artwork has reached the level required to be able to apply for a space at the exhibition. They then have five years to produce their exhibit. This is to allow for botanical life cycles and the fact that it may take some time to collect all the material to create the paintings
  • produce a minimum of six drawings or paintings - on a theme - which meet standards prescribed  by the RHS
  • apply for a place at the exhibition - and then wait and see if they get allocated a place
  • hang their own exhibition - and be judged on the standard of the exhibit as well as the standard of the paintings
  • those attending are generally expected to remain with their paintings for the two days of the exhibition


There's also going to be a seminar which can also be attended by those visiting the show. Both events are ticketed. 


You can read more about the RHS Botanical Art Shows on two pages:
  • RHS Botanical Art Exhibitions - which outlines the process and has links to where you can find more information. Plus it has links to all reviews of the shows where you can see more about the type of exhibits which win Gold Medals and links to all my interviews with the RHS Gold Medal Winners
  • Tips from RHS Gold Medal Winners - every interview I ask the Gold Medal Winners for their tips for doing well and producing good work - and this page documents those tips
_______________________________________________________

PS My blog post reviewing Heat 7 of the Sky Portrait Artist of the Year will now be published tomorrow. Definitely - I'm not going anywhere - it's snowing!!

Tuesday, March 07, 2017

The Top Botanical Art Show in the World - Video

I made a video at the weekend about the RHS Botanical Art Show 2017. It's now available to view on my YouTube Channel - and below.

I think it's the first time that a video has ever been made showing all the exhibits in the show - as well as the overall size of the show. It's made up of about 50 small videos of different parts of the show.  Next year I'm going to have to try for mini-interviews as well!

Overview of the exhibition
For the uninitiated, this is an international and very prestigious show. Botanical artists jet into London from all over the world as well as all over the UK to exhibit at this show. It's not uncommon to have artists from at least five continents represented.

In my opinion, this is the top botanical art show in the world because of
  • the challenge it presents to exhibitors
  • the sheer quantity and quality of botanical artwork on display 
  • the status of the botanical artists who exhibit - it's revered by leading botanical artists who know the value of an RHS Gold Medal.
This year, the show at the end of February in the RHS Lindley Hall in Westminster had
  • 26 artists from 8 different countries around the world each exhibited a minimum of six botanical artworks; and
  • nine RHS Gold Medal-winning exhibits on display
  • some of the best technical use of watercolours for painting that you're ever likely to see
  • masses of visitors, many of whom were buying the art on display.

Video of the RHS Botanical Art Show 2017


Below you can view my video (8 minutes 36 seconds) about the show



You can read my comments about the exhibition in Video and review of RHS London Botanical Art Show 2017 on my dedicated botanical art blog.

If you want to know more about what's involved in exhibiting at this show you can
  • review a couple of pages on my website
  • Plus take a look at this video from 2014 (below) when I interviewed Denise Ramsay about her Gold Medal and her approach to developing her exhibit. He six paintings were all bought by Dr Shirley Sherwood - and exhibited at the Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art in Kew Gardens.

More about the show

I'm already looking forward to next year when the show will be in the summer.

Past blog posts relating to this year's show (to date) include:

Friday, February 24, 2017

RHS Botanical Art Show 2017

The RHS Botanical Art Show 2017 is open to the public today and tomorrow at the RHS Lindley Hall in Westminster.  Admission is free. I was at the Preview last night.

Bridget Gillespie with her RHS Gold Medal Winning exhibition of Root Vegetables: Lifecycle  
standing next to Beetroot Beta vulgaris which has won the 'Best Painting in Show' award
at the RHS Botanical Art Show 2017
In future, all blog posts about botanical art exhibitions are going to be on my website dedicated to Botanical Art and Artists - specifically on the News blog 

You can get every blog post emailed to you 

Best Exhibit in Show - Pandanus by Mariko Ikeda from Japan
Posts about the RHS Botanical Art Show 2017 to date are as follows:
Please join me on the Botanical Art and Artists News Blog for more about:
  • who won which medal
  • my review of the exhibition
  • top tips from RHS Gold Medal winners about how to exhibit at the RHS and do well
  • interviews with the RHS Gold Medal Winners
  • and this year, for the first time, hopefully a video!

Monday, February 20, 2017

Interviews with RHS Botanical Art Gold Medallists - from the UK and Europe

At the end of this week, the RHS Botanical Art Show 2017 opens in London in the RHS Lindley Hall.

This post contains interviews with five artists who won RHS Gold Medals for their botanical art in 2016.

I've been writing about the RHS Botanical Art Shows on this blog since 2007. In future, all my reviews about the RHS Botanical Art Shows and interviews with the artists will be on the blog on my dedicated website Botanical Art and Artists. (This has grown traffic fast and now gets two-thirds of the traffic that Making A Mark gets. Also, Alexa's 'similar sites' tool now ranks it as the top website in the world for botanical art!)

You can subscribe get every blog post emailed to you when you Subscribe to Botanical Art & Artists - News by Email

Interviews with RHS Botanical Art Gold Medallists in 2016

Now for the explanation behind this post!

In 2016, there were 13 Gold Medallists and I had to really rethink my normal strategy of including all the interviews with Gold Medallists in one blog post.

After the show, I wrote a number of blog posts about:
Then added their photos and mini-bios to my website pages about Botanical Artists in the UK and Europe and Asia and Australia and Africa....

....and completely FORGOT (I was pooped!) to write up the interviews with the five artists winning Gold Medals who lived in Italy, the Netherlands and the UK! Whoops!

So one year later here it is!

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Interviews with RHS Botanical Art Gold Medallists 2016 - from Australia and South Africa

This is the second in a short series of short interviews  I did with the RHS Gold Medal winners for Botanical Art earlier this year.

These interview posts have been very popular with botanical artists around the world and the first this year was with the RHS Gold medal winners from Asia.

I've amended the latter post to include Akiko Enokido and her display of Classical Camellia Japonica. I had thought she was living in the USA but has in fact returned to live in Japan.

My next post in this series will be about the UK and European artists who won RHS gold Medals at this year's show.

This series follows on from my posts about

Australia

Julie Nettleton (Sydney, New South Wales)

Julie Nettleton won the award for the Best Botanical Painting: Xanthorrhoea resinosa Pers., Grass Three with Antechinus Stuartii, Brown Antechinus which you can see behind Julie in the photograph below. Her painting includes a tiny marsupial mouse.

Julie Nettleton with her Gold Medal winning exhibit of Xanthorroea (Grass Trees) 
at the 2016 RHS London Botanical Art Show. 
She won Best Painting in Show for "Xanthorrhoea and marsupial mouse"

Her display told the life story of Xanthorrhoea sp., Grass Trees’.  They're called this because they develop a trunk from the base of old leaves and can grow to about 2 metres high. Xanthorrhoea are Australian native plants that can grow for hundreds of years because they have can survive fires.

Xanthorrhoea sp., Grass Trees’ - a Gold Medal winning display by Julie Nettleton

The particular ones which Julie has been painting all grow in a small area of protected bushland scrub within the North Head Sanctuary at North Head (on the north side of the entrance into Sydney Harbour - the one on the left as the ferry turns left for Manly!).

Her display tells the life story of the grass tree and includes:
  • a plant with a new spike, 
  • two spikes growing taller and the flowers beginning to form, 
  • a close-up of the flowers on the tip of the spike, 
  • a view of the grass tree minus spike but including its skirt of old grasses, 
  • the tree minus the skirt after it's been through a bush fire - revealing the 'trunk' of the grass tree. Plus a mouse which lives in the grass
  • Finally a grass tree which has recently experienced fire and has no grass - but reveals its structure and interior.
What I particularly liked was that the artwork was extremely well designed as a whole and then within each artwork. This is undoubtedly due in part to Julie's training and background as an interior designer.

Sandra Sanger (Melbourne, Victoria)


This is Sandra Sanger's fourth RHS Botanical Art Gold Medal (previous wins were in 2008, 2010 and 2013) and this year it was for her display of ‘Orchids: Paphiopedilum and Australian Natives’.

You can find my first interview with her in 2013 in this post.

Sandra Sanger and two of her paintings of Orchids: Paphiopedilum and Australian Natives
Sandra Sanger and two of her paintings of Orchids: Paphiopedilum and Australian Natives

The Orchid Show is no longer exhibiting at the same time as the Botanical Art as happened last time Sandra exhibited with the RHS in 2013.

Sandra commented that the great advantage of orchids from a botanical art perspective is that they last for months and progress slowly as they open.

You would think that once you've won four Gold Medals that you might be able to rest on your laurels. However Sandra is a refreshing example of the artist as a constant student!

She is a great enthusiast for continuing to learn about how to paint botanical art. She goes to a minimum of two classes each year and likes taking Master Classes with more than one teacher. She finds she always learns something she didn't know before. She's also a big fan of meeting up with groups of other botanical artists and painting together.

Sandra is a very experienced exhibitor and has shown in a large number of shows in Australia as well as the RHS.

She puts a lot of emphasis into thinking about her presentation and how her work is mounted and presented. In terms of thinking about layout of her work she always works on the floor and looks at how the works relate to one another and flow across the wall in terms of both structure and colour.

In terms of travel, her framer mounts her work and then packs it into a special case for her. He cuts the correct sized shape in foam rubber so that the paintings have a good buffer against jolts and shocks during transport and also cannot move inside the case.


South Africa


Margaret de Villiers (Hermanus, Western Cape)


This was Margaret Villiers's second RHS Show and her second Gold Medal.  She won Best Painting at her first show in 2013.  She is a member of the Botanical Association of South Africa - which used my photos of her for their blog post about Margaret's Gold Medal!

Margaret de Villiers with her display of seven Ericas of the Western Cape Fynbos

Her subject matter is a continuation of her massive and major project to record all the Ericas of the Western Cape Fynbos!

(NOTE: Fynbos means "fine bush". It's the popular generic name for the varied “fine-leafed” plants. 9,300 of the 30,000 species being indigenous and unique only to the Western Cape region of South Africa - this link is to information about the Fynbos Biome).
Fynbos, or the Cape Floral Kingdom, is the smallest of the worlds six plant kingdoms, covering only 0.4% of the earth’s surface. According to its size it is the most species-rich plant kingdom, consisting of some 8600 species, of which 68% occur nowhere else in the world.
Margaret told me that there are over 800 Ericas in the world and 400 of them can be found in the mountains of South Africa.  Her view is that it's impossible for a photograph to carry the amount of information contained in one of her paintings - which is of course one of the main reasons why botanical illustration continues to be regarded as important even in the age of the camera.

Margaret is painting to teach and to tell a story about a unique area of flora!

I hadn't realised until I got home after my first interview with Margaret at her first show in 2013 that Ericas from South Africa had been a theme of paintings by Franz Bauer during his time at Kew Gardens as  'Botanick Painter to His Majesty'.

Margaret uses the classical approach pioneered by Bauer of painting the plant as the major image - but then also including all the dissections and the images of the differentiating characteristics along the bottom edge of the painting.  It's an excellent approach for including all the information required.

Classical Bauer approach to recording Ericas of the Western Cape Fynbos by Margaret de Villiers GM
Many of the Ericas that she paints are brought to her by local people who know she wants specimens to record.  Her preference is to see how they grow on location - she needs to find out what sort of vegetation they grow alongside. However carrying a sticky erica down a mountain is apparently not an easy job!  She tends to take a bottle with a little bit of water.

When she takes a specimen she takes a photo and then works her way through a checklist of things she needs to record to capture the differentiating characteristics of each Erica.

She was keen to emphasise that she has the support of a small army of amateur botanists and she regards her Gold Medal as belonging to the whole team associated with the project.

It's a sentiment I've heard from other botanical artists in the past and I'll doubtless will again.

The Hermanus Botanical Society are also very proud of her - see below and Hermanus Artist Succeeds Again

Image from the Hermanus Botanical Society Facebook Page on 14th March 2016
___________________________________________


How to enter


You can find more information about the RHS Botanical Art Show and how to enter it on the
RHS ​Botanical Art & Photography Shows page on my website

Previous Years


You can take a look at the art which has won a Gold medal in previous years in my blog posts below. The first set is about tips I've had from Gold Medal winning artists. The second set are interviews with those same artists. Both show images from the shows.

More Top Tips for winning an RHS Gold Medal

These are now summarised on a page in the Education section of my new Botanical Art and Artists website - see Tips and Techniques

Interviews with RHS Gold Medallists and Reviews of the Shows

Monday, May 23, 2016

Arts and Crafts at the RHS Chelsea Show 2016

The artists - painters, printmakers, carvers, sculptors etc - exhibiting at Chelsea this week - in THE show in the Royal Horticultural Society's calendar are detailed below.

Various fairs - besides art fairs - are used by a lot of artists to develop connections with art collectors as well as sell their artwork and the various ways in which it can be reproduced. If you've thought of using a non-art fair or major event to market your art, you can get a pretty good idea of the type of artist who shows at such events by reviewing the artists listed below.

Links to their websites are embedded in their names.

Carvers and Sculptors

This is very obviously a show which is very popular with sculptors who I guess will be endeavouring to attract the attention of those with large gardens in need of a statement piece!
  • Martin Cook - carves stone for memorials (best known for the Bali Bombings memorial on Horseguards) and gardens. He's also made the The Shard Garden with Gary Breeze for the late publisher Felix Dennis.This year he's exhibiting one of the main attractions in the 'Fresh' category - called "The Antithesis of Sarcophagi Garden".
a representation of a world turned inside out; a garden inside a sculpture; desolation verses life; civilisation versus nature. 
Iris Torus by David Harber
The Iris Torus....inspired by the reflective facets of a cut diamond and the play between positive and negative and solid and void. The end result is dramatic, with the fragmented, laser-cut mirrored surface emulating the iris of an eye
  • Hesmondhalgh Sculpture - Brendan Hesmondhalgh is a Yorkshire based animal sculptor who works primarily in clay, wax and bronze.
  • Robert James Workshop Ltd - produces Literary Bronze Garden Sculptures
  • Eleanor Lakelin - Eleanor Lakelin uses a lathe and carving tools to make vessels and sculptural forms in wood.
The provenance of materials is of particular importance to Eleanor and she likes to share the story behind each piece of work. In order to create ethical and sustainable work, she has made it her challenge to only use wood from trees felled in South London or elsewhere in the British Isles.
  • Christopher Lisney Sculpture - He lives and works in Gloucestershire and describes himself as an artist blacksmith. He has specialised in garden sculpture since 1999 and likes making original, quirky, large scale sculptural metalwork. A regular exhibitor at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show.
  • Hamish Mackie Sculpture - Sculpting since 1996 with work in public and private collections around the world. He specialises in sculpting and casting movement in wildlife in bronze. Also works on commission and has a prestigious client list
“Observing animals in their own environment is essential to understanding the subject’s physical and instinctive traits. For example, the disposition of a captive predator is very different from that of a predator the wild.”
  • Nicholas Moreton - a working sculptor since 1986, based in Northamptonshire. His stand will incorporate a carving studio plus finished works
  • James Parker Sculpture - a Scottish artist who started making sculptures in 2007. Worked initially with slate using drywall process and now works predominantly with slate or glass but also produces mixed media works. Exhibiting sculpture suitable for gardens
  • Michael Speller - contemporary bronze sculpture. Started a second career as a sculptor after being successful in business - which in turn started with studies at Chelsea School of Art 1996 – 2000. Work in collections all over the world and some prestigious commissions.
  • Stonebalancing - Adrian Grey is an exponent of the art of stonebalancing and he also sells prints of his stonebalancing efforts which are susceptible to change when the tide comes in!
  • Kinetic Seed Sculpture by David Watkinson
      Straysparks Creative Metalwork
      - creating handforged metal sculptures. Shortlisted for best new product design at RHS Chelsea flower show 2011/2013/2015
    • Jan Sweeny - produces wildlife sculptures in bronze
    • Paul Vanstone and Coombe Sculpture Garden - Original sculptures by a prizewinning sculptor exhibited in a garden setting.
    • Edward Waites and Gladwell & Patterson - a sculpture garden of works by Edward Waite who specialises in animals and wildlife
    • David Watkinson - Kinetic and Static sculture - I rather like the idea of a sculptor who looks to natural forms and how they move to create a stimulus for sculpture. I rather like his sycamore seed kinetic sculpture which uses ball bearings so it can move easily in the wind.

    Painters and Printmakers

    Wednesday, March 09, 2016

    Interviews with RHS Botanical Art Gold Medallists 2016 - from Asia

    This is the first of my blog posts about my interviews with 12 of the 13 botanical artists who won a Gold Medal at the 2016 RHS London Botanical Art Show at the end of last month (27-28 February 2016). [UPDATE: Now includes an interview with Akiko Enikodo]

    Best Exhibit in RHS London Botanical Art Show (February 2016)
    Tillandsia by Mariko Aikawa
    The painting second from the left was bought by the RHS for the RHS Lindley Library.
    I've decided to divide up the gold medal winners by geography. Thus this first post covers the FIVE Asian artists namely:
    • Mariko Aikawa - Tillandsia 
    • Sansanee Deekrajang - Tropical Climate plants 
    • Akiko Enokido -  Classical Camellia Japonica 
    • Hiromi Hyogo - Leguminous plants 
    • Chiyoko Ohmi - Paulownia tomentosa
    I've also updated the page devoted to leading botanical artists from Asia on my website - including a new section about leading botanical artists in Thailand.

    You can read tips from the Gold Medallists in the post I wrote straight after the exhibition - Tips from 2016 RHS Gold Medal Winners - Botanical Art

    You can also see the complete list of medal winners in RHS London Botanical Art Show 2016 - Medal Winners

    Mariko Aikawa (Japan)

    Mariko Aikawa GM with the two largest of her display of six paintings of TillandsiaCopyright: artwork - Mariko Aikawa photograph - Katherine Tyrrell
    Mariko Aikawa's display of paintings of Tillandsia (air plants) won the Best Exhibit in Show Award.  The painting on the left was bought by the RHS for the Lindley Library and she sold at least four of her other five paintings. Having the best exhibit of a plant which is not often seen at the RHS Show can also be financially rewarding!

    What I liked about her display was that it was very coherent in terms of the colour palette and how the individual images were arranged - and she also painted some big paintings!  At the same time it was clear how each plant was different from the next. Overall it was a very graceful and aesthetically pleasing exhibit as well as being informative in a botanical context.  I also very much liked the fact that her labels were printed with a font size which made them very easy to read.
    Tillandsia is a genus of around 730 species of evergreen, perennial flowering plants in the family Bromeliaceae, native to the forests, mountains and deserts of Central and South America, the southern United States and the West Indies.
    She began botanical illustration in 2004 - and became a member of the SBA in 2009.

    Her subject for her display was a bit of a challenge. I don't think I've ever seen a display of air plants at the RHS before. The plants are very rare in Japan, very expensive to buy, and they bloom and bear fruit only once in their lifetime. It can take 2-3 years but can also take between 5-10 years for the flower spike to develop - plus they tend to grow in the tops of trees! They have no roots but are not really parasitic as there is connection to the host they use for support. Other plants are merely used as a kind of trellis!

    She bought some of her air plants and then borrowed others from friend who was a collector of bromeliads.

    She prefers to work on Fabriano Artistico Extra White HP 638g/m² (300lb). She paints using a lot of water at the beginning - and drops the paint on to the very wet surface. She then uses a dry brush technique to paint the texture. At present she uses Winsor & Newton (old stock) but also likes Da Vinci paints

    Sansanee Deekrajang (Thailand)

    Sansanee Deekrajang GM - Tropical Climate Plants
    Copyright: artwork - Sansanee Deekrajang photograph - Katherine Tyrrell
    The story of Sansanee Deekrajang's journey to an RHS Gold Medal for Botanical Medal is a sad one.

    Sunday, February 28, 2016

    Tips from 2016 RHS Gold Medal Winners - Botanical Art

    This is the fourth in a series of posts about tips from RHS Gold Medal winners.

    The three previous posts are:

    You can also find a summary of the Tips and Techniques - including those from RHS Gold Medal Winners - on my website Botanical art and artists

    Where more than one artist provides a tip I don't identify the source by name. Otherwise each tip is identified back to its source.  (GM after the name indicates the individual is a Gold Medal winner.)

    Your subject - plants and flowers


    Choice of plant


    Loving the plant

    • You have to love the plant says Julie Nettleton GM (Australia). Never ever paint a plant because you admire a painting of that plant by another artist, love the plant instead!
    • People love citrus plants says Simonetta Occhipinti GM (Italy) - who painted the citrus trees grown by the Medici family.
    The Citrus of the Medici Family by Simonetta Occhipinti GM

    Research

    • Research your plant as thoroughly as possible before undertaking fieldwork. That way you can identify the best sites to visit. (Sarah Howard GM)

    Botany

    Two other 'trends' I noticed in the exhibition - relating to "botanical aspects" are as follows:
    • native species - more and more exhibits are highlighting aspects of plants that are native to the area where the artist lives and/or visits regularly. The two exhibits of the twigs and buds of common UK native trees were particularly popular (by Roger Reynolds GM and Sarah Morrish) and both exhibitors were asked lots of questions. The exhibition opened people's eyes to trees they see every day!
    • recording native species which are rare or endangered - This was a repeated observation and practice of a number of artists. There is no need to travel abroad to find plants which need recording!

    Preservation of the plant


    • To slow down development and deterioration two options are recommended:
      • Store in a refrigerator overnight to slow down the development of flowers or fruit
      • Keep the stems in iced water while working on on a plant in the studio
    • Drop the bloom into alcohol before it starts to deteriorate. It will preserve the entire structure - including stamens - for reference purposes although the colour will drain away. (Akiko Enokido)
    Classical Camellia Japonica by Akiko Enokido 


    Preparation and reference material