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Hundreds of Huge Flowers Spring Forth in Carly Glovinski’s Monumental ‘Almanac’

Hundreds of Huge Flowers Spring Forth in Carly Glovinski’s Monumental ‘Almanac’

“Gardening gives one back a sense of proportion about everything—except itself,” author May Sarton (1912-1995) wrote in her book Plant Dreaming Deep (1968), a journal about discovering a love of tending to the land. For Carly Glovinski (previously), the sentiment incidentally frames something of a raison d’être for the artist’s remarkable large-scale floral installation at MASS MoCA.

Glovinski was especially moved by Sarton’s book The House by the Sea (1977), which traces the author’s move from New Hampshire to the seacoast of Maine. The vibrancy of gardens spurred the artist’s fascination with flowers, culminating recently in an expansive work titled “Almanac.”

a segment of a large, full-wall installation of numerous flower painting cutouts that resemble giant pressed flowers all along a white wall

Celebrating the diversity and dynamism of blooms, the piece explores ideas around placemaking and the passage of time. “For Glovinski, the garden is a metaphor for collapsed time and perishable memories,” says an exhibition statement. Along with Sarton, the artist also draws on poet Emily Dickinson’s love for plants, channeling literary reflections on connecting with the simple pleasures—and sublime chaos—of nature.

“Almanac” takes its name from the annual guide that forecasts weather and a provides calendars for astronomical events, tides, and planting. The piece took more than a year to complete and comprises hundreds of pressed flower paintings made with washy acrylic paint applied to both sides of semi-transparent mylar. The gestural brushstrokes on translucent material evoke a sense of lightness and delicacy, like real petals blown up to larger-than-life size. Above the installation, she’s labeled segments with the months the blooms appear.

Glovinski references pressed blossoms that she has grown, harvested, or collected from friends, nodding to Emily Dickinson’s love of the practice. (The poet created a stunning herbarium containing 424 specimens collected around her home in Amherst, Massachusetts.) “By observing, tending, and preserving flowers, ‘Almanac’ becomes both a visual record of the seasons and a commentary on the labor of care,” the museum says.

See more on Glovinski’s website and Instagram.

a detail of a large, full-wall installation of numerous flower painting cutouts that resemble giant pressed flowers all along a white wall
a detail of a large, full-wall installation of numerous flower painting cutouts that resemble giant pressed flowers all along a white wall
a large, full-wall installation of numerous flower painting cutouts that resemble giant pressed flowers all along white walls
a hand holds a large painted cutout of a flower, in front of numerous others already installed on a wall, to show a realistic rendering of a large-scale yellow bloom that looks pressed

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Hundreds of Huge Flowers Spring Forth in Carly Glovinski’s Monumental ‘Almanac’ appeared first on Colossal.

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An Ikebana Artist and His Student Sow an Unconventional Approach to Flower Arranging

An Ikebana Artist and His Student Sow an Unconventional Approach to Flower Arranging

“I want to explode the idea of beautiful ikebana,” says Kosen Ohtsubo, one of the foremost conceptual artists working in the Japanese tradition.

Since the 1970s, Ohtsubo has been unsettling the ancient art of flower arranging. Incorporating atypical botanicals like cabbage leaves or weaving in unconventional materials like bathtubs and scrap metal, the artist approaches making with the mindset of a jazz musician, a genre he frequently listens to while working. Improvisation and experimentation are at the core, along with an unquenchable desire for the unexpected.

a close up image of a large orb-like installation made of flowers
Detail of Kosen Ohtsubo, “Linga München” (2025), 300 Basket willow branches, candle, metal frame, plastic and metal ties, scrap metal, soil, various flowers and leaves

An exhibition at Kunstverein München in Munich pairs Ohtsubo with Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham who, after discovering the ikebana icon’s work in a book in 2013, became his student. Titled Flower Planet—which references a sign that hangs outside Ohtsubo’s Tokorozawa home and studio—the show presents various sculptures and installations that invite viewers to consider fragility, decay, and the elusive qualities of beauty and control.

Given the ephemeral nature of the materials, photography plays an important role in most ikebana practices as it preserves an arrangement long after it has wilted. This exhibition, therefore, pairs images of earlier works with new commissions, including Ohtsubo’s standout orb titled “Linga München.” Nested in a bed of soil and leaves, the large-scale sculpture wraps willow with metal structures and positions a small candle within its center.

Similarly immersive is “Willow Rain,” which suspends thin branches from the ceiling. Subverting the way we typically encounter fields of growth, the work is one of many in the exhibition that seeds questions about our relationship to the natural world and the limits of human control.

Flower Planet is on view through April 21. Explore Ohstubo’s vast archive on Instagram.

a bust covered in green leaves
Kosen Ohtsubo, “ケロイド人間 / Keloid Man” (August 1976), mannequin, paulownia. First published in Ikebana Ryusei Magazine, October 1976. Photo by Ryusei Photo Department
a close up image peering through an orb of flowers and stems to reveal a candle nested in a pool of soil and flowers below
Detail of Kosen Ohtsubo, “Linga München” (2025), 300 Basket willow branches, candle, metal frame, plastic and metal ties, scrap metal, soil, various flowers and leaves
an installation of grass dangling from the ceiling
Kosen Ohtsubo, “Willow Rain” (2025), 800 basket willow branches, metal frame
a field of fluffy grasses in a white cube gallery
Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham, “This is happening because we live today in a time of corruption […],” (September 27 to November 4, 2017), asparagus. Photo by Jueqian Fang
green fronds hang over a basket with orange flowers in the center
Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham, “Penny Waking up from a Dream” (2025), carrot, Chinese long bean,
reflecting sphere, Japanese woven bamboo basket
carrots with green stems peeking out from a basket
Detail of Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham, “Penny Waking up from a Dream” (2025), carrot, Chinese long bean, reflecting sphere, Japanese woven bamboo basket
a close up image of a pool of soil and flowers
Detail of Kosen Ohtsubo, “Linga München” (2025), 300 Basket willow branches, candle, metal frame, plastic and metal ties, scrap metal, soil, various flowers and leaves
white lilies emerge from a square vase with wooden reeds forming an arch
Kosen Ohtsubo, “怪芋III / Strange Callas III” (2025), Calla lily, willow, custom-designed iron box

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article An Ikebana Artist and His Student Sow an Unconventional Approach to Flower Arranging appeared first on Colossal.

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Wondrous and Mischievous Misfits Populate Rhea Mack’s Bubblegum Daydreams

Wondrous and Mischievous Misfits Populate Rhea Mack’s Bubblegum Daydreams

On candy-colored paper, Rhea Mack draws a world in which all misfits are welcome. The Massachusetts-based artist lovingly renders curious characters with three heads, flowers growing from their palms, or a penchant for plump, strawberry hats.

Mack has a soft spot for these strange oddballs who develop organically, often springing from her Sunday morning sessions seemingly on their own accord. “I usually start drawing, and they just kind of develop over a few hours. I sometimes have a certain feeling or pose in mind, but mostly I am just making it up as I go,” she says.

a figure with a strawberry hat rests on a cat-human hybrid

This intuitive, accommodating attitude influences much of her process, including the decision to draw on pink paper simply “because it made sense,” she says. Mack chooses other materials similarly. “The colored pencil pinks I use in my drawings are very buttery and just feel nice to draw with,” she adds.

As if emerging from a favorite fairytale—creating a children’s book is on Mack’s mind—the drawings twist common plants and animals like dogs and daisies into surreal fantasies. Each is packed with small moments of intrigue and playful patterns like stripes and dots.

In one work, for example, a full human skeleton and dozens of single eyes float from a figure’s gaze, while a pink pup leaps overhead. Another features a quintet bound by a rainbow dress, their bulbous, beige coifs fused together like the clouds above.

Mack’s solo exhibition Massachusetts Dreaming opens next week at Kyst Gallery in Dragor, Denmark, and is on view through May 8. Find prints in her shop, and follow her work on Instagram. (via WePresent)

a five headed figure with two sets of legs wears a striped garment
two twin figures stand under a rainbow and wear striped skirts with the gemini signs on their shirt
a three-headed figure in a striped suit sits atop a turtle with a cat in its lap
two surreal figures stand in a largely pink scene with flowers growing from their palms
a figure in a striped garment standing in front of a large-scale portrait of a white woman with short curly red hair
a figure with a flower head and stem with leaves coming from the top of its head. the figure wears a striped suit

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Wondrous and Mischievous Misfits Populate Rhea Mack’s Bubblegum Daydreams appeared first on Colossal.

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Otherworldly Flowers Emerge from Darkness in Clara Lacy’s Meticulous Graphite Drawings

Otherworldly Flowers Emerge from Darkness in Clara Lacy’s Meticulous Graphite Drawings

Nature has always been a subject of fascination for Clara Lacy, who roamed the fields and streams around her home in Hampshire when she was young, spurring an interest in studying biology. Art also emerged as a way for her to channel her interest in animals and plants, tapping into the long-held tradition of artists documenting flora and fauna for science.

As she moved around to different parts of the world, with stints in Hong Kong and Sydney before returning to the U.K., Lacy absorbed each place’s variations in botanical life, weather, and light, inspiring a body of work that reflects on climate change, species loss, and “the need to find balance between humans and nature,” she says.

a vertical, detailed, realistic depiction of flowers in graphite
“Thanatos”

The World Has Dropped Its Petals is a series of elaborately detailed graphite drawings illuminating the world of flowers. In heavily contrasted grayscale, the blooms are devoid of the bright colors we typically associate with their petals and foliage, instead highlighted by an array of textures and naturally occurring patterns.

“I’ve always been drawn to monotone work for its subtle tonal variations, offering a contrast to the bombardment of colour and light around us, all vying for our attention,” Lacy tells Colossal. She was drawn to graphite because its limited palette helps the subject to stand out through contrasts like delicate lines or deep blacks. She’s also interested in how graphite is often overlooked in fine art, classified typically as a sketching material rather than a standalone medium.

Lacy titles her pieces after characters in Greek myth like Thanatos, the personification of death, and twin brothers Nyx (Night) and Hypnos (Sleep). She uses her own photos for reference, collaging and layering components in Photoshop until she finds an overall composition that resonates. The World Has Dropped Its Petals draws inspiration from stills lifes of the Dutch Golden Age, too, characterized by dark backgrounds from which flowers or fruit appear to pop in brilliance.

The series is on view through April 13 at James Gorst Architects in London. Lacy has also started working on a new project exploring time and aging, which emphasizes zoomed-in views of flower fragments. Find more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

a vertical, detailed, realistic depiction of ruffled flowers in graphite
“Heimarmene”
“Helios”
a vertical, detailed, realistic depiction of a bundle of small flowers in graphite
“Nephele”
a vertical, detailed, realistic depiction of small flowers in graphite
“Selene”
a vertical, detailed, realistic depiction of a carnation in graphite
“Elpis”
a vertical, detailed, realistic depiction of peonies in graphite
“Nyx”

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Otherworldly Flowers Emerge from Darkness in Clara Lacy’s Meticulous Graphite Drawings appeared first on Colossal.