Cotton collection
Gossypium sp.
I am a botanical art teacher and my students love to bring me specimens to paint. A particular student had grown two varieties of cotton in her garden, the Sea Island Brown Cotton and the Red Foliated White Cotton. Both were grown early on in America, Sea Island Brown Cotton highly prized because of its long fibers and silky texture and Red Foliated White Cotton being a short staple white cotton. Beyond the intriguing history of this plant, I was inspired by the structural beauty and diversity in the different stages of the cotton boll. A cotton boll is the protective case around the soft cotton seeds. (The seeds are attached to the soft part of the cotton). I was attracted to the leaflike bracts that were a range of colors and sizes. The contrast of the soft fuzzy light cotton against the elegant bracts was a feature that I wanted to emphasize. In this painting, I showed a range of cotton bolls in different stages that are tightly closed, starting to open, overflowing with cotton seeds, and have emptied of their cotton seeds.
I tend to enjoy creating artworks that show collections that compare and contrast specimens. This allows the viewer to discover and be curious about the plant and to become their own observer of nature.
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Read more about this artist’s work: 18th Annual International