The Art Of Anne Ophelia Dowden
Transcription
The Art Of Anne Ophelia Dowden
BIOGRAPHY A nne Ophelia Todd was born in Denver and grew up in Boulder, CO. She spent her early years roaming the foothills and mesas of the Rocky Mountains. “I collected and drew any living thing that came my way, especially insects and flowers, and the study of nature was my absorbing hobby.” * Todd graduated with an art degree from Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie Mellon). She moved to New York City in 1930, taught drawing for more than 15 years, and also worked as a designer of wallpaper and drapery fabrics. During that time she married fellow artist Ray Dowden. Dowden entered the world of botanical illustration in the early 1950s, when magazines and journals began using her art work on their covers and in their articles. She saw this as a chance to combine her hobby and her profession, and resigned from teaching in her late 40s to go into botanical illustration full time. She was in her 50s when she took the steps to write, design and illustrate her first book, Look at a Flower. In the early 1900s, after 60 years in New York City, Dowden moved back to Boulder to be near family and her ‘beloved mountains’. She set up her studio and published her last book, Poisons in Our Path: Plants That Harm and Heal, in1994, when she was 87 years old. Dowden died in 2007 at the age of 99. September 17, 1907 – January 11, 2007 “… among America’s leading botanical artists of the 20th century, and probably the most popular.” – James White, curator of art and principal research scholar, Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation Andersen Horticultural Library Courtesy of Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation. Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA. January 18 – May 2, 2012 Creator/Curator: Lucienne Taylor 952-443-1400 · www.arboretum.umn.edu *Dowden, A.O.T. Something about the author Auto-biography Series. Vol.10. (Bloomfield Hills, MI: Gale Research), 75. Wild Green Things: The Art of Anne Ophelia Dowden The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer. The Minnesota Landscape Arboretum. A premier national arboretum, is part of the College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences at the University of Minnesota. ©2011 Minnesota Landscape Arboretum. EXHIBIT LOCATIONS REFERENCES This exhibit has many stops. Look for the numbered sunflowers 1-11 to see the complete exhibit. Anne Ophelia Todd Dowden Art Acquisition Fund. Retrieved online 2/8/2011: http://huntbot.andrew.cmu.edu/hibd/ HIBD-T/News-T.shtml 1. Oswald Visitor Center Lobby Anne Ophelia Dowden Collection. Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation. Retrieved online 2/8/2011: http:// huntbot.andrew.cmu/HIBD/Departments/Art/Dowden.shtml - Introduction 2. Skyway Ramp - Scanned illustrations Botanical Illustrations by Anne Ophelia Dowden. An Exhibition of Botanical Illustrations by Anne Ophelia Dowden. 17October 1965 – 15 May 1966. Hunt Botanical Library (Pittsburgh, PA: Carnegie Institute of Technology) 3. Snyder Lobby - Artist information 4. Hallway to Library - Scanned illustrations 5. Library Reception Dowden, A.O. 1973 – 1998. Anne Ophelia Dowden papers. Children’s Literature Research Collection archives. Elmer L. Andersen Library, University of Minnesota: Minneapolis, MN. - Early life and career 6. Library Main Room - Wild Green Things 7. Library Main Room - Look at a Flower 8. Library Main Room - Rickett’s Wild Flowers of the United States 9. Library Main Room - This Noble Harvest Dowden, A.O. 1999. “Herbal Art: Autobiographical sketch of Anne Ophelia Dowden.” The Herbarist #65 (Kirkland, OH: Herb Society of America),46 – 49. Dowden, A.O. 1990. Something about the Author Autobiography Series, Vol.10 (Bloomfield Hills, MI: Gale Research) 10. Library Main Room Genocchio, Benjamin. 2007. “Anne Ophelia Todd Dowden, 99, Artist, Dies.” Art & Design, The NYTimes, 1/16/2007. Retrieved online. 11. Rare Book Room Display - original artwork, Lamb, Ann. 1993 Herbal Art, The Art of Botanical Illustrations. The Herbarist, 44. - The Clover and the Bee and Poisons in Our Path: Plants That Harm and Heal Wild Green Things A full list of Anne Ophelia Dowden books is on our website www.arboretum.umn.edu/library.aspx Thank you to Karen Hoyle, Kathy Allen, Susan Moe, Christine Aho, Renee Jensen, Sandy Seha-Luoma, and Darren Terpstra. Also thank you to the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation, and to Art Works for the art materials on loan for the length of the exhibit. Ligon, Linda. 1993. The Botanical Art of Anne Ophelia Dowden. The Herb Companion. April/May 1993. Retrieved online 2/8/2011: http://www.herbcompanion.com/print article.aspx?id+5620 Materials utilized in this exhibit are from the Andersen Horticultural Library, the Children’s Literature Research Collection, and the Bio-Medical Library, all part of the University of Minnesota Libraries.