Home » Exhibitions » Louisiana’s Natural Treasure: Margaret Stones, Botanical Artist

Louisiana’s Natural Treasure: Margaret Stones, Botanical Artist

posted in: Exhibitions 1

Hill Memorial Library
LSU Campus, Baton Rouge
Through December 4, 2020

Margaret Stones was featured in Southern Garden History Society’s 2019 publication of Magnolia.

 

Margaret Stones was an Australian botanical artist known for her remarkable watercolor drawings published in Curtis’s Botanical Magazine (Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew), Endemic Flora of Tasmania, and Native Flora of Louisiana. Ms. Stones died in 2018 at the age of 98.  LSU Press published an oversized special folio edition of Native Flora of Louisiana in full color in the same year.

The collection of Ms. Stones’s watercolor drawings of Louisiana plants numbers 226 separate works completed over about fifteen years from 1976 until 1991.  The originals are carefully preserved in the LSU Libraries Special Collections.  The current exhibition is a wonderful opportunity to see original watercolor drawings, photographs, letters and archival materials that put the Native Flora in context and illuminate the process of creating the full body of work.

Native Flora of Louisiana Folio Edition

 

More information about Margaret Stones here:

Louisiana’s Natural Treasure: Margaret Stones, Botanical Artist

Follow Randy Harelson:
Randy Harelson, President (Louisiana) Randy Harelson was born in Macon, GA to parents whose families both came from East Baton Rouge Parish, LA, for many generations. The family moved back to Louisiana when Randy was seven, but always called him their “Georgia peach.” Educated at LSU Lab School and Louisiana State University, Randy moved to Massachusetts in 1974 to teach art in an innovative “integrated arts in education” program in Attleboro Public Schools. A gardener since childhood, he worked at Hill-Roberts Elementary School to develop an “outdoor classroom” of trees, shrubs, and flowers while a full-time art teacher. He later served as a professional designer and assistant horticulturist at Blithewold Mansion, Gardens and Arboretum in Bristol, Rhode Island. Randy’s broad career has included writing and illustrating nine published books, and running a retail nursery in Seagrove Beach, Florida that won the S. J. Blakely Award in 2003. Back home in New Roads, Randy has planted a small arboretum of trees and shrubs both native and imported, documented in Louisiana by 1860. Randy first attended a SGHS annual meeting at Mount Vernon in 2010. The next year his home was included in the Sunday tours at the Baton Rouge meeting. Randy and his husband Richard Gibbs, an architect and gardener, have been members ever since, and Randy joined the board of directors in 2015. At home they care for two acres of gardens, a 500-year-old live oak, the 200-year-old LeJeune House, and a Siamese cat named Miss Priss.
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  1. Peggy Cornett
    | Reply

    Hello Randy,
    This is great. should we link this to your lead article in Magnolia? The link above to more information on Margaret Stones doesn’t work.

    thanks,

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