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In order to share its expanding collection of botanical artworks with as broad a community as possible, the Institute administers a travel exhibition program. This program gives museums, schools, botanic gardens, arboreta, garden clubs and other interested organizations the opportunity to display in their own facilities the same fine botanical art and illustration that has been displayed in the Institute's gallery during its exhibitions. All exhibition artworks are shipped ready to hang, and checklists or brochures are provided. The brief exhibition titles given below link to full descriptions, and further information about loan conditions and reservations is available at the end of this page. |
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International Exhibition of Botanical Art & Illustration
An exhibition of artworks from the Hunt Institute’s permanent collection has been selected from our 13th International Exhibition of Botanical Art & Illustration. This travel exhibition features watercolors, prints and drawings by 68 artists from 15 countries and is available until August 2013.
Example of 15 works in the exhibition
13th International PDF
John Wilkinson's Trees
These 48 artworks by John Wilkinson are the original, complete set of illustrations for Collins Handguide to the Trees of Britain and Northern Europe (London, 1978) now in the Hunt Institute's collection. The paintings include trees that can be seen in the woods, forests, hedges, parks, gardens and town streets of the British Isles and northern Europe.
John Wilkinson has held a number of one-man exhibitions in London and has won medals for his paintings from the Royal Horticultural Society. He has also illustrated guides to mushrooms and toadstools, butterflies and moths, cats, and the countryside. Wilkinson's work was included in the Hunt Institute's 5th International Exhibition of Botanical Art & Illustration, 1983, Botanical Watercolors by British Artists Andrew Brown and John Wilkinson, 1995 and Gifts of Winter, 2000. His work is included in several private collections including the Dr. Shirley Sherwood collection, London. He occasionally holds residential painting courses in England and continues to paint a wide range of subjects.
Wilkinson PDF
Poisons in our path: Watercolors by Anne Ophelia Dowden
This exhibition of 42 original watercolors by Anne Ophelia Dowden shows us that despite the poisonous qualities of these plants, they also hold much beauty and interest, and give us a new respect for the parts they play in nature to harm and to heal. It also shows the importance of precise scientific identification rather than reliance on common names that vary all over the world.
All of these paintings were used to illustrate her book Poisons in Our Path: Plants That Harm and Heal. They were based on research paintings she made from living specimens over several years. She also wrote the text, designed the layout of the book, and prepared everything for publication. Mrs. Dowden ceased painting and made a gift of her brushes after Harper Collins published this book in 1994.
Dowden PDF
Yuuga: Contemporary Botanical Watercolors from Japan
The title Yuuga, which translates as elegant, graceful and refined, aptly describes the 35 artworks by 29 artists. This exhibit represents a selection of the best contemporary botanical art that has been produced in Japan in the last 40 years. Many of the artworks were added to the Hunt Institute’s collection from its International Exhibition of Botanical Art & Illustration, a triennial series that has occurred since 1964.
Example of 15 works in the exhibition
Yuuga PDF
For current travel exhibitions "on tour" across the country, please see the News and Events page.
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URL for this page: huntbot.andrew.cmu.edu /HIBD/Exhibitions/Traveling.shtml |