![]() See the photos and video on the page for her Kew Gardens gallery: ![]() walking into Marianne's gallery at Kew Gardens on typically gray British day and suddenly feeling transported to Australia or Jamaica or Africa thanks to the beautiful artwork that surrounded you! Imagine, a world before photographs and movies and internet. This gave so much more richness and vibrancy and helped those who saw the work feel more immersed in the plant's native area. What amazing things she did at a time of life when many others in that era were already wind down for "old age"! I was especially interested to note that her botanical art, unlike most at the time, actually showed the backdrop for the plant she depicted. At age forty, she finally had her freedom. ![]() Marianne took care of her father and led a fairly conventional (from the sound of it) life from the time she was twenty-four until he passed away sixteen years later. ![]() ![]() I love reading about women who write their own journey and I love reading about women whose adventures come later in life. This book is well-written and beautifully illustrated (I'm grateful the end papers show some of Marianne's own artwork) and the back matter is rich and extensive. Marianne was a wild bird who not only refused to let Victorian gender roles confine her but also changed the course of botanical illustration forever." ![]()
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