STORY BEHIND THE ART OF Liz Shippam
25th Annual International
American Society of Botanical Artists and Wave Hill
Blueberries in Transition
Vaccinium corymbosum
Last year I reread a favorite book, Ovid’s Metamorphoses, a narrative poem that connects a series of myths to tell the story of the world, from the beginning of time to Ovid’s day. The link between these myths is the idea of transformation.
Painting plants makes it impossible not to be aware of the shifting nature of things, and my love of blueberries is due, in large part, to their transience and colors that change slightly each day. The fruit starts as silvery green, and then pinks and purples spread from the sepal across the fruit before it turns a powdery blue. The colors are softened by a layer of bloom that covers the surface and protects the fruit, but over time the elements damage this perfect coating.
Following very heavy rainfall, I noticed that this waxy surface had been largely removed on the ripe berries growing in my garden. The berries had been transformed from pale matte blue into richly colored, shiny orbs with just little patches of bloom remaining. Metamorphosis. I liked the idea that each blueberry was a tiny world, and I decided to paint them many times their actual size.
I used a simple palette of transparent primary colors from which I mixed the soft greys for the waxy bloom, and I layered the paints to capture the many rich colors of the skin.