In this year's exhibition, specialist curator Karen Stewart has again sourced an incredible selection of works by South Africa's leading botanical artists. Many works pay homage to the the Stellenbosch University Botanical Garden's incredible impact on conservation and education by depicting many beautiful and highly threatened species in the garden's ex situ conservation collections. The garden gives visitors the opportunity to relax, unwind, learn and explore. SUBG contributes to meaningful biodiversity conservation by sampling and managing ex situ collections of species and populations at risk of extinction according to global best practice criteria.
All works will be for sale and proceeds support SUBG's conservation work.
Date: 28 September - 6 October 2024
Time: 9:00-17:00
Venue: SUBG office and laboratory
Click to view the 2024 Exhibition Catalogue
Free scheduled walkabouts and tours
Saturday 28 September @ 12:00, Garden Curator's tour, covering conservation, the garden strategy and history, and much more. Join Dr Donovan Kirkwood, SUBG's curator, for an hour-long walk in the garden sharing his wealth of knowledge, experience and vision for this unique place.
Sunday 29 September @12:00, Art Curator's tour: focusing on the art in the exhibition and highlighting some of the exceptional works.
Saturday 5 October @12:00, Botanical Art doyenne Vicki Thomas: a personal take on this year's collection with personal highlights explained.
Sunday 6 October @12:00, Art Curator's tour: focusing on the art in the exhibition and highlighting some of the exceptional works.
Art with PURPOSE
Karen Stewart
Botanical Art Curator
We are proud to present the second edition of Botanical Art and Photography exhibition at the SUBG. Art has become a powerful medium to communicate the fragile state our fynbos. SUBG has generously given artists access to the ex situ collections to enable them to learn and paint these endangered plants. Wendy Hitchcock facilitated a workshop and the many Oxalis paintings are a result of this effort. It is hard to find rare material to paint and the relationship has become valuable to both the artist and the garden curators. It is horrible that nearly a quarter of western Cape flora is considered either threatened with extinction or of conservation concern. We believe in botanical artists who are amoung the most knowledgeable and passionate people about plants who in their role as citizen scientists are transforming our attitudes and understanding. This year we have included photography and have looked for artists who bring a special insight to a plant through their work. While photography is not traditionally considered botanical art, this definition is evolving quickly. The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) has included photography in their annual exhibitions since 2019. We hope that through the appreciation of this fine collection of artworks that you are able to experience the wonder and amazement the artist feels towards their subjects. Their personal stories show us that they usually start with a special connection, fascination and need to know more. It is precisely these qualities that we wish to nurture in our audiences, amazement which we hope translates into action. There are various organisations that people can join to further their curiosity. The Botanical Artists’ Association of southern Africa arranges exhibitions, meetings and talks to further the field of botanical art. Volunteer based Custodians of Rare and Endangered Species (CREW) are involved in finding, counting and reporting on vulnerable populations.
All works are for sale, the artists and gardens share the proceeds, so by buying a work you are ensuring the future of botanical art – a good thing by anyone’s book.
EVERY POPULATION AND INDIVIDUAL AS DISTINCTIVE AS A FINGERPRINT
Dr Donovan Kirkwood
Garden Curator
I am so pleased that Stellenbosch University Botanical Garden is hosting our second specialised botanical art exhibition. Not only has exhibition curator Karen Stewart sourced the best botanical artists in South Africa, we’ve worked with them over the last year to specifically illustrate some of the special and most threatened plants in our collections. Ann Norris’s Gethyllis kaapensis is so rare that it has never been formally illustrated before, and we are proud that our conservation work is helping avoid the extinction of this species, but has also enabled this work that is both and artistic and scientific record. Botanical art has many special features in the realms of fine art, science and conservation. Botanical art is of course every aesthetically pleasing and accessible, each work a unique representation of a botanical diversity that also reflects different artists techniques and approaches. But it does go so much deeper. Features that are hard to notice in plants or the field can be highlighted and shown in detail with great care. Botanical artists are also gifted observers, working with our scientists to accurately represent key plant anatomy. Every plant has a story to tell of its landscape, abundance or rarity, and biology, every species and even every population and individual as distinctive as a fingerprint, a reminder that biodiversity is all diversity, not just lists of species names. Importantly many of the plants we work with are seasonal, disappearing underground during the dry summer, some only flowering briefly for a few days or weeks. Sometimes we are simply not around them at critical moments. For most of the year, these out of sight gems may seem less important and simply be forgotten or overlooked. Botanical Art provides a constant and emotionally compelling reminder, keeping the most beautiful ephemera in our field of view.
Exhibition highlights
Visitors can view the exhibition daily from 09:00 – 17:00 - access is included in the normal SUBG entrance fee (R15 per person, R10 for pensioners, free of charge for Stellenbosch University students and staff).
Botanical Art and Photography exhibition: a curated selection of original works by South Africa's top botanical artists and photographers.
Rare plant vendors: indigenous and exotic succulents, carnivorous plants, rare aroids, bulbs, and loads of specialty plants including special releases of SUBG rare plants on the first weekend of the exhibition (28-29 September).
Botanically-themed gifts, homeware, and décor sales. High-quality reproductions of botanical art and greeting cards.