Thursday 27 June 2013

Do you have a look at other blogs - the Sketchbook Challenge this month is garden doodles - have a look at what others are doing and challenge yourself!

One of Lesley Riley's experiments

Back to ScienzeNaturali again - see the faces & figures?


There will be an additional workshop with Alysn Midgelow-Marsden on Sunday 28th July - Venue TBC - watch this space.

There are still plenty of places for the August, September and October workshops

Tuesday 25 June 2013

Flora Grubb Gardens


Flora Grubb Gardens

For a different outlook on garden centres - where you might find much inspiration take a look at Flora Grubb in San Francisco - virtually of course!

Back to ScienzeNaturali - what about flowers that flatter to deceive?




Friday 14 June 2013

Scienze Naturali

999534_10152926748185226_1752557885_n972082_10152914701580226_844625975_n944423_10152930780530226_1651911516_n943615_10152930050700226_178167073_n943072_10152936575805226_623580643_n941537_10152926749935226_1856467072_n
935781_10152898540745226_518420209_n531454_10151964894285226_2066669746_n7266_10152926538410226_1319522159_n1600_10152926747120226_614851363_n1005706_10152926749035226_2139880975_n

Scienze Naturali, a set on Flickr.

If you have a facebook page you can follow Scienze Naturali for photos like these..

Sunday 9 June 2013

Joan Miro on art and gardens


Quelques fleurs pour des ami

Joan Miro wrote "I think of my studio as a vegetable garden. Here there are artichokes, over there potatoes. The leaves have to be cut so the vegetables can grow. At a certain moment you must prune. I work like a gardener or a winegrower. Everything takes time.  My vocabulary of forms for example did not come to me all at once.  It formulated itself in spite of  me. Things follow their natural course. They grow, they ripen, you have to graft; you have to water, as you do for lettuce. Things ripen in my mind."

Landscape with rabbit and flower

Monday 3 June 2013

 The front cover of this year's book is a design by Angie Lewin
Angie Lewin studied art and then printmaking in London in the 1980s. After working as an illustrator she then went on to study horticulture followed by a return to printmaking.

Angie looks at plant communities on an intimate level, even the fine lines of insect eggs on a flower bud are observed in her work. Still lives often incorporate seedpods, grasses, flints and dried seaweed collected on walking and sketching trips.

Angie also refers to her interest in the work of Eric Ravilious "A Wedgwood cup designed by Ravilious, may contain feathers and seedheads"

The cup and saucer illustrated in her design above is one of Ravilious's Garden design:

the designs in this collection vary, and include gardening implements as well as plants. Have a look at other designs -such as the cucumber house...
 or flowers on a cottage table: