"Elemental" is the perfect word to describe George Olson's watercolor drawings of the plants of the tallgrass prairie. Delicately precise yet filled with vigor and color, they present the prairie in its individual elements and--taken as a group that celebrates the hues and textures of tallgrass wildflowers and grasses--in its seasonal abundance. In The Elemental Prairie, the combination of George Olson's luminous drawings and John Madson's eloquent essay "The Running Country" encourages us to look at the prairie world with newly appreciative eyes. For some years Olson has focused almost exclusively on the grasses and wildflowers of the North American prairie, meticulously reproducing their elemental structures and colors while--proving once again that art can both imitate and enhance nature--emphasizing their magical loveliness. By painting certain species in their winter and summer "plumages," he reveals the plants' stark wintry framework as well as their more glorious warm-weath
Charlie wrote on the fly leaf: Dear Marilyn, I look forward to finding each of these plants and pressing them in the pages of this book as we explore the wilderness together. Love, Charles
Wonderful plates. But even more remarkable is the stunning panorama of landscapes that have disappeared fom our modern horizon. Painted with nothing more than simple prose in an 18 page essay by John Madson, bringing vivid pictures of the bygone prairie to my imagination.