STORY BEHIND THE ART OF DENISE WALSER-KOLAR
16th Annual International
American Society of Botanical Artists and the Horticultural Society of New York
Lilac
Syringa vulgaris
More and more, I am painting subjects that I am growing in my back yard. Sometimes you see something that you hadn’t noticed before and you just have to paint it. I have found my paintings are more successful when I have that "have to paint it" feeling. I live in a cold climate in Minnesota and the growing season is from the last frost in mid May until the end of October. I have lilacs, a pear tree, blueberries, raspberries, a lot of David Austin roses. The rosehips, which keep their color all through the winter, are a more interesting painting subject for me than the roses. I have a maple tree that turns a beautiful red. I have planted gooseberry plants this year and I hope I will have the berries next year. I love painting the detail that makes people notice beauty that they might otherwise have passed by.
I chose to paint the lilac because the flowers were unusual last year. We had a very, very early spring in 2012 followed by some very, very cold weather. When the lilacs started blooming that year, they were a different color than they had ever been before, not the usual bluish. I don't know if it was because of the weather, but I am assuming it was. Anyway, when I saw the beautiful rose-colored buds on the lilacs, I just had to paint them. I want people to appreciate the fact that even though the lilac is a mass of flowers, every single one of those little blossoms is completely different from all the others - in shape, color and position. For instance, one has petals flipped one way, another another way. They are not row after row of the same thing.
Once you pick a lilac it wilts after only a day or two, so I had to work very quickly to get sketches and color matches done. Then, I worked on the painting for almost a year. There were so many little buds and flowers that I almost quit a couple of times because it was taking so long, on and on (over 200 hours total). But then it would have been a waste. I finally took a piece of tracing paper and cut a one-inch hole in it, so all I could see of my work was that one little area. It made the painting seem much less overwhelming when I couldn't see the whole thing! It was the hardest thing I have ever done.