Login or Signup

Facebook user?
You can use your Facebook account to log in.
Join The Community
Login | Register | Subscribe
 

Forever blooming: Amazing daffodil garden closed, but serigraphs alive in new book

Forever blooming: Amazing daffodil garden closed, but serigraphs alive in new book
Font Size:
Default font size
Larger font size

Gene Bauer has planted close to a million daffodil bulbs in the hills behind her home in the San Bernardino Mountains. For 40 years, she opened her property for three weeks each spring, free of charge, so the public could bask in the glory of all that yellowness, in the passion and hard work of a woman intent on making the world a more beautiful place.

Bauer said the people who flocked to her home each year were generally polite and respectful. But she's 83 now, and preparing the property for visitors has become too much to handle. Last year she posted signs around her house saying the daffodil garden was closed forever.

It still is, but now Bauer has filled the void with a different offering of beauty: her collected artistic works in the book "Botanical Serigraphs: The Gene Bauer Collection."

Bauer started making her botanical serigraphs in 1972, when she became the native flora chairwoman of California Garden Clubs Inc. She was the first person to hold this position, and her main job was to help educate other members of the club about the native plants of California.

A normal person might have simply sent an occasional letter or postcard to leaders of the 26 districts in the club, just as a normal person might plant three dozen daffodils behind her house instead of hundreds of thousands.

Bauer skipped postcards and created a series of monthly booklets, each dedicated to one flower that inspired her during trips to arboretums and botanical gardens around the state. When she came across a plant that caught her eye, she would draw a picture of it with colored pencils, then she hand-screened that image onto thick cover stock. She screened another depiction of the plant on tissue paper, and a simpler drawing -- often just a leaf detail -- went on an oversized envelope. The serigraphs were steeped in '70s colors but still have a graphic freshness 40 years later.

The artwork was accompanied by an essay that, though thoroughly researched and carefully crafted, read like a love letter. She included a map of California with hatch marks that indicated the flower's habitat as well as complete information on the garden where she had originally stumbled upon it. All these pieces were assembled in a booklet half the size of legal paper, bound with a single piece of yarn.

She chose all types of plants: the orange and red splotched lilies (Lilium humboldtii var. bloomerianum), the bright white Matilija poppy (Romneya coulteri), and one of our most iconic natives, the California redwood (Sequoia sempervirens). Of the pale blue blossom of the buckthorn she writes, "I marvel at such a cool, celestial color emanating from an earthbound planet."

"Botanical Serigraphs" collects the artwork and edited versions of the essays.

Copyright 2012 nwitimes.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Print Email

Sponsored Links

Current Conditions
33° F
Sponsored by:

Latest Local Offers

EMT Towing
FREE towing with repair services!
EMT Towing
Grieger's Motor Sales Inc
Receive 10% off any service performed by our certified technicians this month. Up to $50 max savings.
Grieger's Motor Sales Inc
Chesterton Martial Arts & Fitness
FREE FIRST MONTH for martial arts classes!
Chesterton Martial Arts & Fitness
Winey Insurance Agency
Natural Disaster
Winey Insurance Agency
All Aspects Heating and Cooling
10% OFF any parts, service, or installation! (coupon inside)
All Aspects Heating and Cooling

Featured Businesses

Hint: Enter a keyword that you are looking for like tires, pizza or doctors or browse the full business directory, powered by Local.com