STORY BEHIND THE ART OF CAROL WOODIN
Botanical Art Worldwide: America's Flora
Yellow Lady's Slipper
Cypripedium parviflorum var. pubescens
When I first started making botanical paintings around 1990, I had just begun learning about orchids, both native and exotic. Over the years a special affinity for slipper orchids has focused my attention on them, whether cultivated or found in the wild. Native orchids always require a search throughout hill and dale; I searched for many years to find a flowering yellow lady’s slipper. There were many historical sites in western New York State that no longer existed. Finally, with the help of friends, I was able to see this large flowering variety (Cypripedium parviflorum var. pubescens), as well as the smaller flowering variety (C. parviflorum var. parviflorum), on a University-owned, rural wetland in central New York. It was a difficult navigation through the wooded wetland to find them, but with a good hand-drawn map, anything is possible! I’ve seen it a few other times since then, and always marvel over its variability.
Seeing these flowers in the wild is always a thrill, and by spending time with them out there drawing and painting, they become impressed in one’s memory. The day is almost always a glorious spring day, with the chatter of many birds that thrive in the same wetland habitats. A beautiful fragrance accompanies these flowers, engaging four of the five senses. So every time I look at the finished painting, the memories flood back with 3D effect!
This is the fourth painting I’ve made of yellow lady’s slippers, and its subject was closer to hand – it was blooming beautifully in the New York Botanical Garden’s Rock Garden. This lovely garden can seem very secluded, and it is often bursting with color and fascinating specimens. A large clump of yellow lady’s slippers was tucked in among some ferns, peonies, and Jeffersonia when I visited in early May. This painting is a watercolor on vellum that has been stretched over a panel.
Back to List
Read more about this artist’s work: Out of the Woods