When she was 11 years old, Mariko Ikeda entered an artwork in a national botanical art competition. She had been making carefully observed botanical drawings for four years, and now she was ready to send one to the National Museum of Nature and Science in Tokyo. It administered the competition for the sake of fostering a greater love and understanding of nature among the nation’s elementary, junior, and high school students, not to mention advancing Japan’s centuries-long tradition of kachō-ga, bird and flower painting.
She entered again the next year, this time under the watchful eye of her biology teacher. On a rainy autumn Sunday, he came to the school to provide her with her next project, a small dogwood branch that he cut while standing on a ladder. What’s more, to make sure she got it right, he had her do the drawing in his laboratory next to their classroom. And when she finished, he sent her home with additional words of encouragement and guidance.
She began, in short, under the most favorable of circumstances—brimming with talent and determination in a setting that expected much and gave much. And soon enough, she won her first first-prize. And then another. Now, she had “only” to venture forth. But where? And with whom? Upon the advice of her mentor, the late Mr. Kazunori Kurokawa (and with his introduction), she asked the one person who should know, Dr. Shirley Sherwood. She had come to Tokyo for the opening of Contemporary Botanical Artists: the Shirley Sherwood Collection, the first exhibition of its kind in Japan. Mariko had just turned 17.