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Posts Tagged ‘nature’

Click to download itinerary.

Click to download itinerary.

Plan now for a peaceful, creative and rejuvenating Autumn!

You are invited to join Andie Thrams in Yosemite National Park to learn how to capture the sounds, scents and landscape of this special place in your sketchbook.

Here is the latest at
Classes Near You > No. California:


Andie Thrams

www.andiethrams.com
Andie is a painter and book artist devoted to creative work in wild places. She teaches in California, Oregon, Alaska and Hawaii. Her work is widely exhibited and honored, and is held in many private and public collections. Get the latest news about Andie’s popular classes on her website.

    Autumn in Wawona with Andie Thrams
    Yosemite National Park
    October 10 – 13, 2013
    Upon arriving at Yosemite, meet with Andie and fellow classmates on the Grand Porch at the Wawona Hotel to enjoy an evening of sunset painting. Then get ready for daily walks through meadows and forests to learn how to make marks, create images and capture colors using watercolor, gouache, ink and pencil. Cost: $440 for the retreat, includes boxed lunches. Not included in the course fee are: lodging, transportation, food & drink (except lunch). Download itinerary


    Private Creativity Coaching & Artist Mentoring

    In addition to the workshops listed here, Andie also works privately with a limited number of students. Contact Andie Thrams

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In desperate need for some time away from the daily grind?

Check out this weekend retreat now at Classes Near You > Texas:


Cynthia Padilla, Dallas

http://fruitflowerinsect.blogspot.com
Cynthia Padilla teaches painting and drawing classes at prestigious universities, major museums, arboreta, art societies across the US, Canada, Central America and internationally. She curates exhibitions, serves as a juror of exhibitions, lectures and conducts demonstrations, and leads painting retreats worldwide. Cynthia is also the founder of the Botanical Art & Naturalist Illustration group on Yahoo!

    Art and Nature Retreat at the Black Land Prairie in Ana, Texas
    This two-day weekend retreat will be held June 7-9, 2013. The course fee includes instruction, two nights lodging, two continental breakfasts, two dinners and other activities. Sketchbooks will be shared at the end of each day over cookies and cocoa. What more could you ask for!

    If you are in need of rest and relaxation or have been curious about artist retreats, sign-up for this rejuvenating weekend getaway.

    For more information, visit Art & Nature Retreat: The Black Land Prairie on Facebook.

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exhibit_ASBAReedTurner_May2013


8th Annual Botanical Art Show and Sale at Reed-Turner Nature Center

Long Grove, IL
May 18-19, 2013
9 AM – 3 PM

The Reed-Turner Woodland Botanical Artists’ Circle consists of botanical artists who are current or former students of the botanical art program at the Chicago Botanic Garden. This group is an Artists’ Circle of the American Society of Botanical Artists.

Learn more about the Reed-Turner Woodlands

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Here is the latest at Classes Near You > Ohio!


Deborah Kopka, DK Designs

www.dkdesigns.org
Botanical illustrator, Deborah Kopka is the principal artist at DK Designs. Deborah licenses her artwork, creates illustrations for publishers, and teaches botanical art classes through her design studio.

    Botanical Illustration: Drawing in Graphite
    Owens Community College
    Mondays, June 3, 10, 17, 24 and July 1,8
    6-9 PM
    In this introduction to botanical illustration, participants will learn about drawing techniques used by contemporary botanical artists. Plant specimens are provided for the first class meeting. A supply list will be sent to registered participants.
    Limit: 12
    Cost: $249
    Download Summer Catalog (PLAY, May-Aug 2013)


    Botanical Illustration: Painting in Watercolor

    Owens Community College
    Mondays, July 15, 22, 29 and August 5, 12, 19
    Learn painting techniques used by natural science illustrators and how to use watercolor with other media. Plant specimens are provided for the first class meeting. A supply list will be sent to registered participants. Limit: 12
    Cost: $249
    Download Summer Catalog (PLAY, May-Aug 2013)


    Botanical Drawing Camp for Grades 6-12

    Owens Community College
    Students will learn how to draw botanical subjects and develop a new appreciation for nature. Art supplies and specimens are provided.
    Cost: $149 per student

    This four-day class will be taught at two locations:

    Owens Findlay Campus
    July 15-18, 2013
    9 am – Noon

    Arrowhead Campus (Maumee)
    July 15-18, 2013
    9 am – Noon

    Download Summer Catalog (PLAY, May-Aug 2013)

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You have mentioned that the Marianne North Gallery mobilized botanical knowledge. Were there particular kinds of knowledge that North hoped to cultivate?

Yes, absolutely. There are several running themes in North’s work that are telling of the kinds of stories she wanted to capture and put on display. First among these was the sheer abundance and variety of botanical nature. North rarely painted the same thing twice, and opted instead to…

Join the conversation with featured guest, Katie Zimmerman

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Click to view poster.

Click to view poster.

Annual Wildflower & Art Festival
Idyllwild Nature Center
Idyllwild, CA
May 25-27, 2013
9 AM – 4 PM

Visit the Idyllwild Nature Center in the mountain community of Idyllwild this Memorial Day weekend to learn about local wildflowers and native plants. This fun-filled weekend also includes guided nature walks, an art exhibition, and activities for the entire family.

Weekend visitors to Idyllwild also have the opportunity to start a personalized guide to plants at ArtPlantae.

Learn more below!


Free Workshops with Purchase of Sketchbook at ArtPlantae

Create your own personalized guide to plants! Purchase a sketchbook at ArtPlantae during the Annual Wildflower Show and Art Festival at the Idyllwild Nature Center (May 25-27, 2013) and attend any of the sessions below for free during the Memorial Day weekend. Limit 10 people per session.
Cost: $9.95 per person

Participants may repeat a session if space is available. Priority goes to first-time attendees. Waiting lists will be established if necessary. Please register early. Sessions will begin promptly at their scheduled start times.


Let’s Explore Plants
Memorial Day Schedule

    Saturday, May 25
    9:30 – 10:30 – What makes a stem a stem?
    11:00 – 12:00 – What makes leaves, leaves?
    12:00 – 1:00 – Lunch Break
    1:00 – 2:00 – What makes flowers, flowers?
    2:30 – 3:30 – What makes fruit, fruit?


    Sunday, May 26

    9:30 – 10:30 – What makes fruit, fruit?
    11:00 – 12:00 – What makes a stem a stem?
    12:00 – 1:00 – Lunch Break
    1:00 – 2:00 – What makes leaves, leaves?
    2:30 – 3:30 – What makes flowers, flowers?


    Monday, May 27

    9:30 – 10:30 – What makes flowers, flowers?
    11:00 – 12:00 – What makes fruit, fruit?
    12:00 – 1:00 – Lunch Break
    1:00 – 2:00 – What makes a stem a stem?
    2:30 – 3:30 – What makes leaves, leaves?

cre8time_ProudToSupport_image

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Our conversation with featured guest Katie Zimmerman continues…


Part of your research explores how the Marianne North Gallery works as a built environment and how the gallery functions within the broader context of the gardens at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Why study these aspects of North’s contribution to botany?

One of the really fascinating things to me about North’s life and work is how such an individual and solitary woman, pursuing an equally individual project, was actually a fairly ordinary part of a broader, and highly social, botanical enterprise. We can see this very nicely when we look closely at the North Gallery as a space and the ways in which that space transcended its walls to become an integrated part of the gardens and the world beyond. Looking at how the gallery functioned as a built environment allows us to chart…

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An analysis of outdoor activities by Deborah J. Chavez, a specialist in outdoor recreation research, suggests this to be the case.

Chavez writes about student reactions to selected outdoor activities in Youth Day in Los Angeles: Evaluating the Role of Technology in Children’s Nature Activities.

The Youth Day activities described in Chavez (2009) include two technology-dependent activities and two activities in which technology did not play a role. The format for each activity was the same. Each activity was designed to have a 5-minute introduction, a 30-minute activity, a 15-minute wrap-up, and a 10-minute transition to the next activity. Youth Day participants ranged in age from 6-17. Thirty-eight youth from the Los Angeles area were divided into eight groups and rotated through each activity on a pre-planned schedule designed by Chavez. Two trained facilitators were assigned to each group. Observers were stationed at each activity to record participant’s reactions and comments.

Here is a brief review of the Youth Day activities described in Chavez (2009):

    Technology-Dependent Activities

    Camera Safari:
    Participants took photos of things that interested them as they walked along a nature trail. Photos were printed and categorized for analysis.

    Geocache:
    Participants looked for hidden treasure along a nature trail using GPS units.


    Technology-Free Activities

    Etchings:
    Participants completed rubbings and created etchings.

    Nature Scavenger Hunt:
    Participants received a list of natural items to look for along a trail.

Each activity was evaluated by participants, observers and facilitators. Participants rated each activity using a color-coded rating system where a Green rating meant participants liked an activity, a Yellow rating meant participants thought an activity was “OK” or that they were undecided about their opinion of an activity. A Red rating meant participants did not like an activity.

The technology-dependent activities received the highest approval ratings from participants — Geocache (92%), Camera Safari (86%). The Nature Scavenger Hunt and the Etchings activity received approval ratings of 76% and 62%, respectively. These results, in addition to the thorough notes and feedback of facilitators and observers suggest that using technology in outdoor nature activities may be a good way to encourage young people to engage with nature.

To read a full analysis of Youth Day, including a review of background literature related to outdoor education, how Chavez designed Youth Day, and Chavez’s helpful discussion of planning and logistical issues for informal science educators interested in conducting similar one-day events, look for Chavez (2009) at an institution that subscribes to JSTOR. Conduct a search by country on JSTOR’s website. Alternatively, you can subscribe to the journal Children, Youth and Environments for access to all back issues of this journal.


Literature Cited

Chavez, Deborah J. 2009. Youth Day in Los Angeles: Evaluating the role of technology in children’s nature activities. Children, Youth and Environments. 19(1): 102-124



You may also enjoy reading…

Outdoor Education, Plant Awareness

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EEWeek2013_square_web_ad_FINAL ArtPlantae is proud to again participate as a partner of National Environmental Education Week (EE Week). Hosted by the National Environmental Education Foundation (NEEF), EE Week is the nation’s largest celebration of environmental education. Held each year the week before Earth Day, this annual event inspires environmental learning and stewardship among K-12 students.

This year educators will explore how technology can be used to enhance environmental learning both inside and outside the classroom. The theme for EE Week 2013 is Greening STEM: Taking Technology Outdoors. The acronym “STEM” stands for Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics.

As part of Taking Technology Outdoors, EE Week will highlight how to connect kids with nature through new technologies that enable scientific research and 21st century skills including creativity, innovation, communication and collaboration.

During the month of April, we’ll explore how technology can be used to encourage an interest in plants and botanical art. Using the new “Tips & Tools” feature, we’ll find out how artists, naturalists and teachers use technology (get ready to share!). We’ll also take a traditional look at botanical art. We won’t step too far away from technology when we do this, however, because it’s technology that makes enlightenment possible.

All of this, plus outreach events too. Hope you’ll join us!


Related

Take Technology Survey for EE Week 2013

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This month the featured resource is YOU!

During March, our focus will be on the comments and suggestions that came up during January while readers completed the Reader Survey.

Readers completing the survey provided helpful feedback. This month I want to take some time to cultivate the type of community resources readers are asking for on this site. While reading through the survey, it became clear that publishing a single announcement about what readers are asking for wouldn’t be enough to put into action the changes readers are requesting. A single announcement would have been pushed down below the fold and would’ve scrolled off the bottom of the page in only a few days. So let’s take some time with this.

Before we begin, I want to make a couple of announcements.

A quick comment about commenting. Some readers have told me they do not comment because they don’t want to use their real name. I understand this completely. Please know that when commenting, you only need to use your first name or enter a screen name. You do not need to enter your first and last name. Hopefully this makes you a little more comfortable. The community conversation readers are asking for can only happen if readers communicate with each other, so I hope you will consider participating in the conversation when you feel comfortable.

Beginning next week, I will begin to post topics in which readers have expressed an interest. If you would like to suggest a topic of your own, please suggest a topic for discussion or pose a question to peers by dropping a note in the
new Suggestion Box. I will compile a list of topics and questions and will post a new topic or question for discussion each week (or as topics/questions are submitted).

As this month progresses, I hope our conversations will establish the momentum to take us well beyond March and into a new era of learning here at ArtPlantae.

Classroom teachers, what would you like to ask artists?

Artists, what do you want to ask naturalists?

Naturalists, what do you want to ask fellow naturalists, artists and teachers?

Drop a Note in the Suggestion Box




UPDATE: Join the Conversation



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MAM2012-Going-GreenerGong-500 ArtPlantae has received a Making A Mark Award by artist and writer Katherine Tyrrell, editor of Making A Mark, a blog about art for artists and art lovers. Katherine’s resource-rich blog is rated #3 out of the top 25 art blogs in the UK.

Katherine awarded ArtPlantae with The Going Greener Gong for 2012. This award is given to the art blog “most stimulating in relation to getting us in touch with nature and the environment.”

It is an honor to receive this award from Katherine and I appreciate her bringing attention to the site and the wonderful guests who have taught us so much.

View previous award winners of The Going Greener Gong, as well as winners in the plein air category and the sketchbook category at Making A Mark.

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Plants have a presence in each of the paintings created by Ruth Ava Lyons.
I asked Ruth why she chose plants to connect viewers to nature.

Ruth replied:

I like a field-based approach to my subject matter. I wander in various environments and study and synthesize and translate and interpret my impressions of the natural world. Artists like me vacillate between our direct experiences in nature and the solitary studio setting. We follow the work of biologists, botanists, ecologists, and naturalists to inform and strengthen our visions with their findings, so there is a lot of cross-cultural personal research that takes place as well. It is always challenging for me to attempt to capture the essence of plant imagery while…

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