Special Invited Exhibitor - Margaret Stones AM MBE

Halesia carolina  (Drawn Kew, May 12th, 1992) On loan from artist     

Click to view a larger image

The Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens are very honoured to be able to display an example of work from one of the nation's greatest botanical artists. Margaret Stones has kindly agreed to allow the Friends to exhibit an example from her considerable body of work.

A summary of Margaret's career is given below, (from Australian Women's Archive Project)

"Margaret Stones is one of Australia’s foremost botanical artists. She undertook professional art training at Swinburne Technical College and the National Gallery of Victoria Art School in the 1940s. At the invitation of John Stewart Turner, Stones attended lectures and demonstrations in the School of Botany at the University of Melbourne, and joined their summer expeditions to the Bogong High Plains, 1948-1950. In 1951 she left Australia for London to further her botanical knowledge, working independently for the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew and other botanical institutions for more than 30 years. From 1958 she was the principal contributing artist to Curtis's Botanical Magazine, producing more than 400 watercolours. Her most important project during the 1960s and 1970s was the illustrations for The Endemic Flora of Tasmania, and from 1975 her work on the Flora of Louisiana project. Commenting on Margaret Stones’s botanical knowledge and experience, Tasmanian botanist Dr Winifrid Curtis ‘recalled that Stones never needed to be told, but invariably knew, which sections to draw in order to facilitate correct taxonomical classification’. A genus has been named after her, Stonesia and a Tasmanian species, Stonesiella."

The image on display is on loan from the artist and is not for sale.

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