Story behind the art of Marianne Hazlewood
27th Annual International
American Society of Botanical Artists and the Society of Illustrators
Arisaema costatum
I am officially an Arisaema geek… or maybe nerd! Here is a short story of obsession or, if you’re kind, a love story…
I came across these strange and interesting plants when I was looking for a topic for my diploma in botanical illustration at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. I’d seen them before at our local garden show, and lusted after them, but now I had a legitimate excuse to go nuts. They were available as tubers. I could buy and grow them myself and thus have them readily to hand, and I could buy a range of them fulfilling the requirements to paint five different plants on a theme. Decision made.
These strange and interesting plants have been my focus of attention ever since.
I planted multiple specimens of each of my selected Arisaema: A. consanguineum, A. costatum, A. galeiforme Serizawa, A. griffithii, A. intermedium, and A. ringens.
Each specimen introduced me to new aspects of these plants. I marvelled over their tubers, planted them like treasures, and watched the shoots emerge. Photographing them through their prime to their soggy demise (they wilt, in the autumn, in a very gooey way), I watched them and, when I had true, typical specimens, untampered with by frost or slugs, I got to work. I planted them into pots so that my subjects could come indoors, and I could color match and paint them.
Initially, I didn’t know on what aspect to focus. The inflorescences are so fantastic, the foliage follows some set types, with fascinating idiosyncrasies, and when I first started working with these plants, I hadn’t yet seen the amazing fruits. I knew I needed to document my plants in the first growing season and the next. I settled on depicting two seasons of growth, incorporating inflorescence, foliage, and then fruits. I found the pieces worked together as a set of six, the compositions playing off each other.
I started with rough sketches and then measured drawings. Then using a drybrush technique, I refined, color matched, and worked on each aspect over the seasons.
I particularly love the graceful shape A. costatum has in its inflorescence with its long entwining spadix. It is the most graceful of Arisaema flowers and the carmine and white striped spathe is candy-cane delicious. The leaflets are edged with carmine, which diffuses up the veins, segmenting the fresh green elephantine trifold leaf. In autumn the vibrant orange fruits are held on a curved peduncle that morphs from deep chocolate to a banana yellow. This truly is a rainbow of Arisaema.
I have planted so many of these over the last few years that I now anticipate July (when they emerge here in Scotland) with a silent recitation excitedly whispering through my mind… “The costatum are coming…”
Additional information about A. costatum:
Common names are ribbed cobra lily (Pradhan, 1990) and purple or sikkim jack in the pulpit, (Mehta and Bole, 1991).
A. costatum has huge leaves which make it a popular garden plant. It usually flourishes in European and some North American climates. The underside of the leaf is quite distinctive, with prominent parallel veins. The Latin species name comes from the ribbed inner surface of the spathe tube (the tubular bract that encloses the flower spike). Costa means rib and costatus is ribbed.
The plant is deciduous and grows to 60 cm (23.5 in) tall and wide. Its native distribution extends through central and eastern Nepal, western China, and southern Xizang (Tibet) in mixed forests, among shrubbery, and on open slopes, at a height of 1900–3180 m (6233-10,433 ft). The flowering period is from June to July, with fruit ripening November to December.
References
Gusman, Guy and Liliane. The Genus Arisaema, A Monograph for Botanist and Nature Lovers, A. R. G. Gantner Verlag K. G., 2006.
Mehta, Ashvin and Bole, P.V. 100 Himalayan Flowers, The Vendome Press, 1991.
Pradhan, Udai C. Himalayan Cobra-lilies (Arisaema): Their Botany and Culture, Primulaceae Books, 1990.