“I have always been drawn to cabinets of curiosities and the more scientific side of botanical illustrations.”
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Sydney-based textile designer and illustrator Edith Barrett has always been inspired by two things. Botanics, and the Australian landscape. And this is very much reflected in her intricate, beautiful collection of work.
Her love for illustration began in her childhood, growing up in 20 acres of native garden, vaguely contained bush and paddocks, in Yendon in rural Victoria.
“It was a pretty amazing backyard to collect and fossick around for little things to draw.” Barrett says.
Barrett went on to study printmaking in high school, before having formal training at university, majoring in screen printing at RMIT.
“For me this allowed me to illustrate and mark make with a little more purpose, I liked the practicality that textiles gave to drawings. I had a small detour in my studies to the Estonian Academy of Arts where I was pretty excited to be surrounded by so many ethnographic textiles, the natural history museums of Europe and the space and freedom to explore my own style.” Barrett says.
Barrett then moved to Sydney for a job in a commercial textile print studio, Longina Phillips Designs, and in between her job, and her company, Edith Rewa, she spends her weekends exploring the surrounding national parks to examine and draw.
Another huge inspiration for Barrett has been the intrepid paintings and etchings commissioned by explorers and naturalists such as Sir Joseph Banks. Her illustrations reflect this this in their intricate, fine detail.