As if in obedient response to my recent expression of interest in illustrations of plant dissections, my botanical illustration teacher Mali
held a plant dissection workshop over the course of three days last
week. As it turns out, she teaches them over summer every year; but I'm
not going to let that ruin my enjoyment of the coincidence. I was
particularly happy that it would be Mali teaching this course, because
I'm extremely fond of her and find her love of scientific drawing
contagious. This is an example of an exquisite Boronia painting with
dissections by Mali:
Needless to say, I was very excited to be learning these skills and was determined to get as much out of the course as I could. I managed to scrounge up enough pennies for an old stereo microscope that I found on ebay, and swindled a free dissection kit from my kindly vet-student sister Kate. Although was looking forward to it immensely, I actually enjoyed dissecting and observing plants even more than I had anticipated; and despite the fact that I barely managed to dissect and illustrate the inner workings of a single flower over the whole workshop, when the three days were up I was left wishing it wasn't over. Three days of staring at such microscopic detail ended up feeling like three hours, and I felt as though I would need another month to actually complete what I was trying to draw...which amounted to little more than a few pencil sketches and some notes:
Just
to deliberately confuse and challenge myself, being the
contradiction-loving Gemini that I am, I chose to read a book called The Secret Teachings of Plants
on my way to and from the workshop. The book, a gift from my very dear
friend Jerome, discusses the limitations of science to accurately
describe nature, and specifically plants. Not that the book dismisses
science altogether, as it necessarily covers a lot of scientific ground,
but it does call into question the sense of certainty that people
derive from the process of scientific reductionism. I haven't finished
the book yet, but what I read of it served as a nice reminder during
those three days that I was merely observing patterns that frequently
occur in nature, rather than discovering cold hard facts that were
indisputable.Needless to say, I was very excited to be learning these skills and was determined to get as much out of the course as I could. I managed to scrounge up enough pennies for an old stereo microscope that I found on ebay, and swindled a free dissection kit from my kindly vet-student sister Kate. Although was looking forward to it immensely, I actually enjoyed dissecting and observing plants even more than I had anticipated; and despite the fact that I barely managed to dissect and illustrate the inner workings of a single flower over the whole workshop, when the three days were up I was left wishing it wasn't over. Three days of staring at such microscopic detail ended up feeling like three hours, and I felt as though I would need another month to actually complete what I was trying to draw...which amounted to little more than a few pencil sketches and some notes:
So anwyay, onto what I did during the workshop: first up was pulling apart a lily and bud to see what a fairly simple flower looks like when pulled intro it's various sections. I was rather pleased to be working with lilies, as the ones we used were very similar to the gorgeously scented Stargazer lilies that I had in my wedding bouquet, and that I am familiar with from years of drawing them. As I'm sure many of you have noticed, these flowers have one of the most visible reproductive systems of any plant you're likely to see:
On the second day we got to dissect flowers from the daisy family, and happily Mali had brought Echinacea flowers which happen to be another one of my favourites. Echinacea was my introduction into the world of herbalism, a subject close to my heart, and I've always loved the flowers as a symbol of that initiation. Like lots of things I love, I originally thought they were weird and not particularly beautiful at all, which I think is what makes me all the more fond of them now.
flowers and bracts:
Unfortunately I wasn't able to take my echinacea specimens home after the class due to current restrictions on plant matter leaving the gardens, but I have them sitting in the fridge at the botanical garden observatory where my classes are held, and I intend to squeeze some more drawing time out if them before they perish. Hopefully one day I'll have time to complete a full scale painting of an echinacea in colour, and with all the dissections and individual parts illustrated also. One day.
2 comments:
hey, it looks like a beautiful workshop, where do i sign up????
hey Lucia, you can find all the details of classes and workshops held at the botanical gardens through their website. I don't think there'll be another dissection one 'til next summer though, sadly. I go to the classes at the melbourne gardens but they also hold them in geelong and cranbourne.
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