The Golden Age of Botanical Art

The aim of seeking to recreate this type of botanical illustration is to give artists a technique that is effortless to pick up while looking like it has taken years and years of practice.

Botanical Illustration has up until the 20th century been the sole means of information on various plants, identification, dangers, uses and more. Botanical illustrators traveled the world cataloguing plant life in new worlds and unexplored territory. During the 18th and 19th centuries, the modernization of the printing press led to widespread distribution of the work of botanical artists. Widespread access to books on plant life became available just as gardening was becoming a popular pastime for a growing middle class in the Victorian Age, . Having readily available, affordable books on plants and cultivation information fed the gardening rage of the 19th century that continues to this day.

The printing press and its continuous improvements led to the popularity of Botanical Illustration as both a science and an art form. The printing press was evolving so rapidly during 18th and 19th century that new methods brought Botanical Illustration more and more acclaim. According to Hunt Botanical, there were three classes that the methods of printing pictures fell into:

  • relief
  • intaglio
  • planographic

These terms relate to the printing surface:

  • Intaglio is etched into metal
  • Lithograph, (planographic) is etched in stone
  • Relief stands above the block or plate

George Glazer.com says the first major book of Botanical Illustrations was Hortus Eysttensis published in 1613 by Basilius Besler. It took a team of 10 engravers 16 years working under Besler to create this book. These illustrations in Besler’s book remain very popular to this day. Follow the link to George Glazer.com to see examples.

In a paper by Mary Burns of Northern Illinois University published in Cogent Arts and Humanities that can be found through Taylor and Francis Online goes into great detail about the printing processes of Botanical Illustration in 19th Century Great Britain. Burns categorizes the primary printing types as:

  • Aquatint
  • Lithography
  • Wood Engraving
  • Color-printed wood engraving
  • The Baxter Process

This article by Burns gives wonderfully detailed descriptions of each process and what it entailed. It is well worth a read for the new appreciation it gives on the process of creating the wonderful Botanical Illustrations of the 19th century and why they are worth preserving.

The techniques used by the 18th and 19th century Botanical artists have been my goal to imitate through modern tools. Over time I have been able to come up with some ways to simulate those techniques, at least partially, minus the printing presses. The aim of seeking to recreate this type of botanical illustration is to give artists a technique that is effortless to pick up while looking like it has taken years and years of practice. The primary focus is to have a beautiful painting to be proud of without a long period of practice.

Happy Painting!!

Never Ending Nature

Do artists see nature differently than other people?   Do artists seek to replicate nature, enhance it or just see something others don’t?  Paintings more often than not have a life that is different from what one might see with the naked eye.  When artists choose nature as subject, nature changes, becomes something more. Whether landscape, still life or botanical illustration, nature through the eyes of the artist shimmers with a vivid electrical quality that might have previously escaped notice.

The website, Skinny Artists has “150 wonderful art quotes that can inspire.”  Among the quotes is one from Russian born artist, Marc Chagall.  Chagall states, “Great art picks up where nature ends.”  Chagall’s message is the goal nature artists are working for.  These artists are enhancing nature and bringing it to life in a way not usually seen by the average eye.  Nature artists seek to give notice to simple beauty that might otherwise be missed.

Botanical illustration is frequently categorized as more science than art.  Yet what botanical artists are depicting is more than simple scientific re-creation. Their illustrations give nature the intrigue that leads us to look more closely.  Margaret Mee, (1909-1988), conservationist and botanical artist, brought the Amazon Rainforest to life through her paintings of orchids and other exotic plant life she encountered on her excursions into the untouched rainforests.  The vibrancy of nature in Mee’s art sparked an interest in the rainforests that led to later efforts to protect and preserve this vast eco-system.

Today the beauty of nature through botanical art is fostered and nurtured by the American Society of Botanical Artists, (ASBA) and The Society of Botanical Artists, (SBA) in the United Kingdom and other national, international and regional organizations.  These organizations continually show us how wonderful the world of nature is when viewed through the magic of the artist’s hand.  Botanical artists are the portraitists of plant life, highlighting the beauty and uniqueness of individual horticultural species.  Botanical artists “pick up where nature ends” to open our eyes to the beauty around us.

Nature is never ending while art lives.

The following Margaret Mee painting and others can be seen at the Audubon House Gallery of Natural Art.

http://www.audubonhouse.org/Mee.aspx

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