The biodiversity project

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My father was a botanist, a plant taxonomist. The summer before last it occurred to me that I had largely forgotten much that I had learned from him about plant species. I didn't like to think this thought so I started drawing individual plant species. I had some 5 X 7 aquabord panels so I used those, drew on them with pen and ink and added watercolour. You can lift paint quite readily from aquabord so I started doing that. Here are two of those early drawings.

stonecrop
©Gwen Frankton, Stonecrop - Live Forever, 7 X 5, Pen and ink and watercolour on aquabord
© Gwen Frankton, Joe Pye Weed, 7 X 5, Pen and ink and watercolour on aquabord, SOLD

I enjoyed doing these drawings. The process was meditative and it was really satisfying to learn or relearn plant species. I started a project book where I kept notes about each species.

Soon, I started drawing insects I found on the plants. Friends started bring me small creatures they found, which had met untimely ends.

© Gwen Frankton, Monarch Caterpillar, 7 X 5, Pen and ink and watercolour
© Gwen Frankton, Maritime Garter Snake, SOLD

I just kept on making these drawings in a vague sort of way, no plan in mind, whenever time presented. Before too long there were 30, then 40 drawings. And then we went to New York to see the opera. While there we went to the American Museum of Natural History and saw the wonderful, wonderful Biodiversity display there. And everything shifted. Suddenly recording and naming species took on a whole new significance.

Collection Bibliography
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