By Claudia Burns
I forced 5 of the lovely tulips as part of the kind gift of spring
flowering bulbs given to me last fall by my art class after the death of my
brother. I had never done this before so
wanted to try it out.
I planted the bulbs in a pot and kept them in the garage until about a
month ago when I brought them in as they were starting to sprout. They have grown well and bloomed beautifully
and I will replant the bulbs in the garden this spring.
Photo 1 |
My plan was to draw and paint one of the tulips but as I was doing other
art projects for our recent classes, the tulips did not get drawn. They opened more and more widely each day in
a sunny but cool window and then closed at night. Yesterday I decided to get at it and because
the blooms were already fully open with petals increasingly opening towards
horizontal rather than vertical. I decided I would draw the inner parts, the pistil,
stamens, and the attachments of the petals inside. For reference, I took several photos of the
flower in direct sunshine without a flash.
As you can see in Photo 1, the petals are quite open and the internal structures easily visible.
Photo 2 |
Photo 2 was done with a flash and macro lens to focus on the stamens and
pistils (what I planned on drawing).
Photo 3 |
I moved the pot to my art room upstairs where the light was much less
intense, bright but not sunny. Low and behold,
the flowers, including my chosen bloom, started gradually closing (photo 3). This was about 20 minutes after photos 1 and
2.
Over the next hour, the bloom kept
closing to its final resting position (Photos 4 then 5).
In one of the other blooms, which was also, closing I directly observed
the actual movement of the petals.
Photo 4 |
I
wound up sketching the flower in positions 4 and 5 (from life, not photos). My original plans were stymied by the tulip itself,
which had its own intentions. Certainly
makes life difficult for the aspiring artist.
Photo 5 |
I was quite amazed at how rapidly this closing occurred. The fact that the light levels in my art room
were not at all dark but obviously a great deal darker than the sunny window
that the plants were in originally.