Tree Flame: Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh - Pflanzen 2026 - Original Flame Tree Publishing-Kalender [Kalender] (Kalender)
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh - Pflanzen 2026 - Original Flame Tree Publishing-Kalender [Kalender]
- Original Flame Tree Publishing-Kalender [Kalender]
- Verlag:
- Browntrout Verlags GmbH, 07/2025
- Sprache:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9781835623961
- Artikelnummer:
- 12286593
- Umfang:
- 12 Seiten
- Sonstiges:
- 12 Abbildungen
- Gewicht:
- 231 g
- Maße:
- 298 x 298 mm
- Stärke:
- 3 mm
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 15.7.2025
- Serien:
- Flame Tree Calendars , Browntrout Wandkalender
- Hinweis
-
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
Klappentext
The wonders of Charlotte Cowan Pearson's exquisite botanical artwork from the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. A fine new art calendar from Flame Tree.
With over 70 acres of picturesque landscape, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh is a must for all visitors. This delightful wall calendar celebrates the beautifully delicate yet accurate botanical watercolours of British plants by Charlotte Cowan Pearson, an outstandingly talented amateur artist born in 1837, examples of whose paintings are held in an album in the RBGE's Library. Informative text accompanies each work and the datepad features previous and next month's views. Printed on FSC-certified paper, with plastic-free packaging.
The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh is a world-leading botanic garden and is home to a diverse and spectacular Living Collection of plants. It was established in 1670 when Andrew Balfour and Robert Sibbald created a physic garden near Holyrood to grow and study medicinal plants. Over 350 years later the garden is a world-renowned plant science and research institution with connections across the globe, committed to explore, explain and conserve plants for a better future.
Charlotte Cowan Pearson was born in Edinburgh on the 24th July 1837, five weeks after Queen Victoria ascended the British throne; she died in the same city on the 6th March 1917 and is buried in the city's Dean Cemetery. Very little is known of Charlotte's life but it is known that she was admitted as a lady member of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh (now Botanical Society of Scotland) in 1894 and that she was an enthusiastic botanical artist. An album of Charlotte's beautiful botanical paintings of British plants, made in a variety of Scottish and Yorkshire locations, is held in the Library of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh and pays witness to her talents as an artist.