"Art is the only way to run away without leaving home" (Twyla Tharp)
Showing posts with label Quandong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quandong. Show all posts

Botanical Art Worldwide Exhibition



Botanical artists from countries around the world will join together to curate simultaneous exhibitions of botanical art to raise awareness of the rejuvenation of this art form and bring attention to plants and their importance to humanity.

Banksia sessilis - parrot bush © Vicki Lee Johnston

The second Botanical Art Worldwide Project will focus on and celebrate biodiversity in the crops that have been closely associated with the human species over thousands of years.


We have chosen to focus on botanical art pieces showcasing the beauty and cultural significance of native plant species that are Bush Foods, Medicinal and Utilitarian Plants.The Botanical Art Society of Australia has focused on First Nations' uses of plants. 'Bountiful Botanicals'.  

My chosen subjects include the Banksia sessilis - parrot bush. This extraordinary shrub is indigenous to Western Australia and we have quite a few outcrops in the hills of Perth where I live. It was never a favourite of mine due to the painfully prickly leaves - I would never have chosen to study, draw and paint it as we would complain about it when walking in the native bushland. After having spent quite some time researching its history and integral uses as an indigenous food source, I drew (pardon the pun) to really love this very important native plant.




I really took my time with observation, drawing, especially colour studies to ensure I was able to capture light, shadow, form and contrast - I usually paint subjects with colourful flowers - in this case the shrub itself is quite insignificant looking in the wild but I wanted to show how incredibly beautiful a plant could be when you look closer and see the many elements.


I am working in a new studio and it took some time to get used to the light and space.



Working carefully to portray this plant in a pleasing way to ensure the subtle shades and tones of green, cream and yellow found a way to create contrast and depth.


I tried my usual method of converting a photo of the artwork to neutral tones to ensure there was a satisfactory amount of contrast for interest, detail and wall appeal.

Banksia sessilis  - parrot bush - © Vicki Lee Johnston

I completed and scanned the finished watercolour paintings and submitted for jury consideration to be included in the Australian exhibition, 'Bountiful Botanicals'.  
I was extremely grateful to learn this artwork and another painting of Santalum acuminatum - quandong - had been accepted and were to be hung in Canberra at the national exhibition.  My quandong painting was also chosen to be exhibited virtually at the worldwide galleries on Worldwide Day of Botanical Art.

Santalum acuminatum - quandong - © Vicki Lee Johnston

Bountiful Botanicals
Exhibition info above

Sneak peak of the Worldwide Video series of chosen artworks


A little footnote to this blog post ... the opportunity to observe, study, create and complete a watercolour botanical artwork is extremely finite and time consuming.  For most botanical artists it truly is a labour of love - a love of nature, science and a love of art.  
For me,  it has been especially poignant as since I completed these paintings  I have not been able to draw, paint or use my hands for much at all for many months due to both wrists being fractured after a fall and limiting most functional abilities.  I am finally getting movement back in my hands and wrists and although I may need future surgery - I am very excited to think it may be possible to draw and paint again!  I'm not sure the art will be as detailed or finite as these for a while - maybe it's time to try more loose work to get my hands working again.  If you've managed to read this far - thank you - I often wonder if this blog is being read but it doesn't really matter as it was and always has been a visual diary for me to reflect on my art journey over the past years.  I hope it has been able to show how it's possible to try anything at any age as long as you have curiosity and wonder in this unique world.


Thank you!

Vicki Lee Johnston 

Botanical Art Worldwide ...



Santalum acuminatum - Quandong © Vicki Lee Johnston
Australian artists were invited to submit for the Australian exhibition of the Botanical Art Worldwide initiative, to be held in Canberra in May.  
This exhibition is featured in a Worldwide Day of Botanical Art on May 18.

Botanical Art Worldwide website

Our Botanical Art Society of Australia  sent out expressions of interest a long time ago and I had made a choice for the native plant I wanted to paint as my submission.  I thought I had plenty of time and did my research, notes, planning etc ... only to find that when the plant came into flower we had a lot of very late storms and inclement weather - my only available flowering subjects had been battered by the high winds and heavy rain.  I realised because of my insistence on painting this subject that I was now left with very little available - the deadline was looming and I had to choose another subject quickly.   Back to the drawing board ..... literally!



My lovely Quandong bush has fruited for the first time!



It was during a gardening session on our property that I discovered our Quandong had begun fruiting for the first time since planting!  We planted this tree five years previously after another artwork assignment for the SBA - a part of my diploma portfolio.  Here is the first quandong artwork and the backstory. I had bought the small plant to study the leaf structure and growth habit.  Once I had finished we planted the shrub with its host plant (it is hemiparasitic) .    Being a desert quandong, it was left alone to do its thing and I checked on it frequently but until this time, five years on, it had not fruited.  I couldn't believe my luck.


Some of the bounty!

I was so happy to see the fruit, it can be quite tart and fleshy with a large brain-like nut inside, however I really love the quandong (or native peach) taste as I am quite partial to tart rather than sweet fruit.   I have to admit I ate the majority of the fruit, we had around forty and they were delicious!  Full of goodness and not to everyone's taste which is fine by me!


 Quandong can be eaten alone, added to sweet or savoury foods and contain vitamin C, the nuts containing complex oils and are a valued ingredient used by our indigenous people.  They are now becoming more widely used in high end restaurants and catering.



Because of my easy access to the plant, I was fortunately able to stage
my subject right in front of me to quickly study and draw.


On to my painting ... after the initial excitement of having my very own indigenous plant subject right in my back yard, I set to work very quickly drawing and composing the artwork.  I only had a week from start to finish, with no room for error.  Despite the rush I enjoyed working with this subject.

I was also lucky to have my sketchbook from the SBA course and found my old study pages for reference.  This really helps with colour selection and shortcuts a lot of the time spent colour testing.




First washes on the leaves ....



Bringing in the fruits ... starting with yellows, greens, oranges and reds



Gradually building up the layers of colour with the yellows, greens, oranges, reds and mapping out the stems and branches.

Getting a bit messy!




I like to look at my almost completed works from different angles, to check the liveliness, tones and form of the artwork so that it looks like a real subject viewed from all sides. 





Once I was happy I scanned the original artwork myself and also managed to get a professional        scan done.  As this artwork was to be submitted online to the jury via digital entry, the professional scan was the better option.  This took a few days and once ready it was sent off to be judged. 




 The judging took a couple of months and I was very happy to be notified that my artwork Santalum acuminatum - Quandong had been selected to be shown in the Flora of Australia exhibition.  It will be held in Canberra at the Ainslie Arts Centre from May 18 until May 27.  I will post another blog update as a reminder closer to the opening.


BASA information


Once I had been informed that my painting was chosen, I had some months to get it fine tuned and framed.  I always struggle with framing choices but usually go for something neutral.


So many choices!

This time I decided to coordinate with the native plant aspect by choosing a wooden frame which blended in with the colours used in the stems and branches.  Once the framing was completed I had now run out of time and it was straight to Pack and Send to head off to Canberra!

Childhood memories x


This painting has truly been a labour of love!  So many memories attached to my subject choice and the artistic experience reminded me of the plant itself, the difficulty struggling to germinate and flourish and the time taken to come to fruition.  Worth the wait for sure ...

On its way to Canberra

All images © Vicki Lee Johnston