3 May to 6 July 2008

 

Artist Unknown

 

Artist unknown

Linum usitatissimum L., Common flax. Pre-1859.

Watercolour and ink on board

60.9 x 48.2cm

Courtesy of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, © 2008.

 

 

Nature Study is the latest in a unique series of exhibitions in which contemporary artists are invited to exhibit alongside works from the collections of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. On this occasion, Louise Bourgeois; perhaps the most admired living female artist, will exhibit recent drawings and sculpture with extraordinary nineteenth century teaching diagrams and plant models commissioned by one of the Garden's great Regius Keepers, John Hutton Balfour (1808-1884), presented on the occasion of the bicentenary of his birth.

 

The deeply personal and remarkably concise drawings by Bourgeois (b. 1911) in Nature Study were made in red gouache on white paper only last year and they demonstrate her consistent concern with motherhood: the cycles of life, nature and human nature, and the polarities of birth and death, growth and decay, separation and togetherness. Bourgeois, who studied mathematics at the age of 15 and whose favourite form is the ellipse (because it has two centres), has expressed her conviction that human identity is a dialogue.

 

In the mid-nineteenth-century, Botany was taught to medical students and Hutton Balfour commissioned well over a thousand large diagrams of plants which were shown during lectures, hung from bent pins on fabric rollers. Nature Study features a number of these diagrams, including one of a small, insectivorous plant (a Sundew) which is probably one of the largest botanical illustrations ever made, measuring over six feet by four feet. Hutton Balfour was Regius Keeper for 34 years (from 1845 to 1879) and his influence can be felt today as he was responsible for building the Temperate Palm House and acquiring Inverleith House and its grounds.

 

Though widely divergent in time, purpose and style, these two bodies of work show curious formal affinities, and occasionally, touch on strikingly similar themes. Taken together, they form a dialogue that communicates a particularly strong and authentic fascination for the natural world - and for life itself.

 

The possibility of bringing together contemporary art and the scientific study of the natural world has been a distinguishing feature of the exhibitions programme at Inverleith House for many years. Previous exhibitions in this series of juxtapositions have featured Laura Owens (also paired with the Balfour collection) in 2000; Rudolf Stingel (with nineteenth-century botanical drawings by Indian artists) in 2006, and John Cage with Merce Cunningham (shown with early twentieth-century botanical drawings by Lilian Snelling) in 2007.

 

The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated publication containing essays by H.J. Noltie and Philip Larratt-Smith and it opens at a time when many of the Garden's world-famous collection of over 500 species of Rhododendron are in flower; visitors are invited to consider the relationship between the human and the natural world, when the drawings of Bourgeois and Balfour are displayed together, for the first time.

 

 John Hutton Balfour

Artist unknown. Three types of marginal teeth found in dicot leaves: Serrate, Dentate, Crenate. Pre-1859 

Watercolour and ink on board.

47.1 x 60.8 cm

Courtesy of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, © 2008.

 

  John Hutton Balfour

Artist unknown. Stenocarpus sinuatus Endlicher (PROTEACEAE). Firewheel tree, tulip flower, Mr Cunningham's stenocarpus. c. 1846.

Watercolour and ink on board.

95.2 x 60.3 cm. 

Courtesy of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, © 2008

  

John Hutton Balfour

Probably by John Sadler (1837-1882). Artocarpus altilis (Parkinson) Fosberg (MORACEAE). Breadfruit. c. 1870.

Watercolour, bodycolour and ink on board. 

49.5 x 62 cm.

Courtesy of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, © 2008.

 

John Hutton Balfour

Possibly by Robert Kaye Greville (1794-1866). Jatropha curcas L. (EUPHORBIACEAE). Physic nut, purging nut. Female Flower. Pre-1859. 

Ink and ink wash on board.

48.5 x 60.8 cm.

Courtesy of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, © 2008.

   

 

For more information please contact ihouse@rbge.org.uk 

 

 

 

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