Marianne Hazlewood : Emerge: Natural Design

Works
Overview

"My new work has roots in a few areas, emergent growth, pattern and plant architecture.

I have been working with the genus Arisaema for several years now. They are part of the Arum family, an exotic plant here in Britain, growing in mountainous regions on the edges of forests in Asia, Africa and North America. They grow from a tuber each year, producing leaves to photosynthesise and a flower to reproduce. I plant them each spring and watch the tubers develop through spring and summer. I love the plants at all stages, but I am particularly drawn to the period of early growth when they first emerge from the ground, and, later, to their amazing patterned flowers or inflorescences.

There is so much information packed into the shoots when they first break through the earth; as they grow, the outer cataphylls draw back to reveal tightly packed stems, leaves and inflorescence. It is a joy to watch these slowly un-crumple, put on length and fill out. Each species has a different botanical architecture, and the flowers, with their highly patterned spathes are among the strangest in the world.

This work focuses on these aspects and is inspired by the photography of Karl Blossfeldt, (1865-1932). Karl was an artist who photographed plant specimens at a magnified scale in the early 1900s. His celebrated book, Urformen der Kunst, (Art Forms in Nature, 1928), presented the plants, in monochrome, reduced to their structural elements, in a way that has captivated audiences ever since.

I've been delighted to transpose his love of detail, rhythm and structure into my own much-loved subject Arisaema. I love the way Blossfeldt exploited symmetry, recurring structure and 'natural design'. I have been exploring this in the plants that I grow, to capture their own natural design in these mostly monochrome works in Japanese ink paste.

I think you may see, how, when my plants are growing, I turn them, to investigate from all sides. I love to see how they are packaged, and how the leaves and stems connect. I am endlessly fascinated with the silhouettes they form at certain stages, their architecture and the patina on their sturdy stems and sculptural inflorescence. I hope you will enjoy these aspects as much as I have in the making of these works."

Marianne Hazlewood is an RHS and BISCOT Gold award winning botanical artist. She works with plants, either sourcing and growing her subjects or finding them on her journeys. She likes to spend time observing her specimens to learn their nature before she illustrates them. The time spent nurturing leads to a deep connection and insight into their growing cycle that lends life and realism to her paintings and art work. She gets very attached to them.

Hazlewood specialises in detail. She creates photorealistic depictions of the plants that she works with to demonstrate the structures, patterns and tones within her specimens. She creates modern botanical illustrations in a number of media, complimenting her wish to document and spotlight particular details.