What is the difference between flower painting and botanical art?
In gerneral, flower painting is a term that can be used to describe any painting consisting predominantly of flowers. These can be anything from still life to botanical studies, or impressionistic garden scenes. It is usually more concerned with the beauty of flowers and capturing the colour and emotion of the subject. The medium can be varied – oil, watercolour, pastel, acrylic etc. In contrast, botanical art has botanical accuracy as its foundation. That is not to say that botanical artists are not concerned with beauty, colour and form (far from it), but the overriding consideration is that the artist captures the essence of the plant and does this by faithfully recording the plant. Botanical art also implies that the subject could be anything in the entire field of botany – fruit, flowers, mosses, lichens, fungi etc. Often microscopic details are depicted at a magnified scale. The usual medium for botanical art is watercolour or pen and ink. In the past, etchings and engravings wer