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STORY BEHIND THE ART OF MILLY ACHARYA

18th Annual International

American Society of Botanical Artists at The Horticultural Society of New York

 

Crocosmia

Crocosmia ‘Lucifer’


The August garden tends to look tired and frazzled, like Cinderella after the ball, but one exotic plant that continues to dazzle and bewitch is Crocosmia. With its pleated green leaves, resembling a swirling skirt, its slender stem tipped with brilliant flowers the color of fire and sun, the plant made its way to my studio from my neighbor's garden where I'd been observing it covetously!

 

Like the crocus, Crosomias take their name from krokos, the Greek for saffron, referring to the color. To this is added osme, meaning pleasant odor, because when the flowers are steeped in water they smell of saffron.

 

Crocosmias, members of the Iris family, originated in southern Africa, but became immensely popular when introduced to gardens and nurseries in Britain. Here plant breeders developed numerous hybrids and cultivars from four closely related genera. Alan Bloom of Bressingham was the plantsman who gave us 'Lucifer' by crossing C. masoniorum with C. paniculata.

 

The plant grows from corms which are choosy about location in our colder climes. Once established, pleated leaves fan out, making room before sending forth a slender stem. Minuscule buds resembling grass seed appear at the tip, becoming progressively more colorful. Gradually they open to reveal striations of crimson and chrome within the six petals of trumpet-shaped flowers, tapering in an alternating pattern along the stem. Eventually they turn into pale green tricuspid berries---the start of the seedpods.

 

The blooms enticed neighborhood hummingbirds to an endless and irresistible nectar-fest. My concern was to convey their alluring hues in all their fiery splendor, without losing any of the brilliance or whimsicality. As the growing season had peaked and there were no further specimens to be had, I felt an urgency to keep pace with the limited samples I had available.

 

Even though some flowers faded before the work was complete, the foliage still retained its vitality, expressing a tempo and rhythms quite its own. The dry note in the composition juxtaposes growth and decline---partly as a tribute to the changing season and partly to acknowledge the inevitability of death in the brevity of life.

Crocosmia 'Lucifer' 

Crocosmia

Watercolor on Paper

16 x 11 inches

© 2014 milly acharya




Trilliums

Trillium cuneatum, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. luteum, T. ovatum

 

Trillium had been on my wish list of subjects to paint for many, many years. These woodland dwellers are inconspicuous, humble and resentful of any disturbance to their patch of earth. Unfortunately they have had to give ground---quite literally---to our desire for more paved surfaces, roads and concrete structures. In upstate NY if you walk by a shady meadow in early May you might find it carpeted with white or red speckles. If your curiosity is sufficiently aroused you might take a closer look and be rewarded with a wondrous discovery.

 

Piercing through layers of detritus and plant-litter is a slender scape with broad triangular leaves, textured and pillowy, whorling around a single “flower” made up of three sepals around three petals which house six stamens surrounding three stigmas. What sacred symmetry!

 

This geometrical consistency has appealed to artisans and artists from diverse practices---Tiffany lamps and fine bone china, traditional Amish quilt designs and postage stamps as well as insignia and business brands and logos---to name just a few. Some representations are clearly recognizable species while others are stylized or abstract renditions.

 

In the spring of 2014 I put the word out and received five different varieties of trillium from the gardens of three different sources. With care I rinsed, teased and freed roots and rhizomes in order to present them in all their hirsute splendor. Then these valued guests were replanted in a pot where they were perfect models until they returned to the gardens from whence they had traveled.

 

 

 

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Read more about this artist's work: 17th Annual International

Trillium cuneatum, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. luteum, T. ovatum 

Trilliums

Watercolor on Paper

17 x 10 inches

© 2014 milly acharya

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