
The Florilegium
The Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney - Celebrating 200 Years
Kew Publishing
Published on 31. January 2018
Book
Paperback/Softback
224 pages
978-1-84246-649-0 (ISBN)
Description
The Florilegium Society at The Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney was formed in 2005 to create a unique collection of contemporary botanical paintings of significant plants that represent the history of the living collections of the Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust.
This beautifully produced book is a celebration of 200 years of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney,
showcasing the botanical richness of these Gardens through the eyes of 64 exceptional Australian
and international botanical artists. The stunning botanical paintings are presented chronologically
according to the date of each species' introduction to the Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney and its Blue
Mountains Garden, Mt Tomah and the Australian Garden, Mt Annan. With paintings of indigenous
Australian plants as well as more exotic species from Asia, the Americas, Africa and Europe, The
Florilegium truly reflects the diversity of the three Gardens.
Each painting is accompanied by a botanical description written by Louisa Murray and a historic
overview by Colleen Morris detailing the discovery of the featured species, its historic and cultural
significance and introduction to the Gardens. With a foreword by Dr Shirley Sherwood OBE, preface
by Dr Brett Summerell, RBG Sydney Director of Science and Conservation, and an introductory essay
by Beverly Allen.
The accompanying exhibition of the same name runs from February - August 2018 in the Shirley
Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
'The standard of the plant portraits is so high and the text so illuminating that this will make a
memorable book.'
Dr Shirley Sherwood OBE
This beautifully produced book is a celebration of 200 years of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney,
showcasing the botanical richness of these Gardens through the eyes of 64 exceptional Australian
and international botanical artists. The stunning botanical paintings are presented chronologically
according to the date of each species' introduction to the Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney and its Blue
Mountains Garden, Mt Tomah and the Australian Garden, Mt Annan. With paintings of indigenous
Australian plants as well as more exotic species from Asia, the Americas, Africa and Europe, The
Florilegium truly reflects the diversity of the three Gardens.
Each painting is accompanied by a botanical description written by Louisa Murray and a historic
overview by Colleen Morris detailing the discovery of the featured species, its historic and cultural
significance and introduction to the Gardens. With a foreword by Dr Shirley Sherwood OBE, preface
by Dr Brett Summerell, RBG Sydney Director of Science and Conservation, and an introductory essay
by Beverly Allen.
The accompanying exhibition of the same name runs from February - August 2018 in the Shirley
Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
'The standard of the plant portraits is so high and the text so illuminating that this will make a
memorable book.'
Dr Shirley Sherwood OBE
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Richmond, Surrey
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Royal Botanic Gardens
Illustrations
90 Illustrations, color
Dimensions
Height: 298 mm
Width: 247 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
1402 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-84246-649-0 (9781842466490)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Colleen Morris has a Masters in Heritage Conservation from the University of Sydney and was the National Chair of the Australian Garden History Society 2003- 2009, and her publications include Terrace Houses in Australia (1999), major entries for The Oxford Companion to Australian Gardens (2002), and Lost Gardens of Sydney (2008). Louisa Murray is the Flora Botanist based at the National Herbarium of New South Wales, Royal
Botanic Gardens, Sydney. She primarily works on PlantNET, the database of the Plant Information
Systems in the herbarium as well as updating all botanical information and distribution data for the
Flora of New South Wales (NSWFloraOnline). She has a wide knowledge of plants and has travelled
extensively in New South Wales and Australian, collecting specimens for the herbarium. She is
particularly interested in daisies and violets.
Botanic Gardens, Sydney. She primarily works on PlantNET, the database of the Plant Information
Systems in the herbarium as well as updating all botanical information and distribution data for the
Flora of New South Wales (NSWFloraOnline). She has a wide knowledge of plants and has travelled
extensively in New South Wales and Australian, collecting specimens for the herbarium. She is
particularly interested in daisies and violets.