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APRIL LEMLY

The 2023 American Flowers Week artwork was created exclusively for Slow Flowers Society by April Lemly, an artist, illustrator, and former flower farmer based in Los Angeles, California.

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APRIL IS A LONG-TIME FRIEND OF THE SLOW Flowers Movement who previously owned and operated Kamama Flowers in Sequim, Washington.

AFW: April, can you describe yourself as an artist?

AL: At my core, I'm a creative and I've had the luck to fall in love with many different mediums. And when I fell in love with working with flowers, I was able to say, "Oh, flowers are just another medium for my art."

AFW: Describe your path to becoming an artist.

AL: I had been making art since I was a child. I wanted to be a teacher, so my bachelor's degree had an emphasis on teaching art to elementary-aged children. But I knew I wanted to pursue a master's degree and earned an MFA in graphic design in 2008 at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco.

AFW: We love your style! What inspires you?

AL: I've always been a 'nature child' at heart. I love animals. I love wilderness. Flora and fauna are my muses. They all show up in my work. As long as I keep creating work that I am really passionate about, the joy shows up.

I love bold color, yes, and I'm pretty free with it in personal projects. Of course, when I'm working with a client's branded palette, the project scope always drives the design.

AFW: Tell us about the chapter of your life when you were a farmer-florist.

AL: I was living and working in Portland, Oregon, and my home garden was like a quilt of flowers from all the previous owners -- for example, a rose garden over here and succulent rock garden over these, peonies along the house and so forth. It was beautiful! I was making vases of flowers for friends and family and someone suggested I should grow flowers and design for weddings, kind of as a weekend project. We knew someone who was getting married, so I volunteered -and it kind of blossomed out of that.

A local organization called EcoTrust had a "Meet Your Farmer CSA" event and I signed up for that. I was the only florist there at the time! From that, I gained a half dozen CSA customers and that was really how I got my name out.

AFW: What time period did that cover?

AL: I started Kamama Flowers in 2013 and grew flowers in Portland until 2016. Then, I farmed in Washington for two years after that. Now that I'm in "concrete" Los Angeles, I miss it. The flower farmers and florists I knew and worked with in the Pacific Northwest are part of a wonderful community with so much heart and soul and respect for one another. They share and help one another -- and I don't have that here.

AFW: Great memories of a time when you were more deeply immersed in flowers, right?

AL: Definitely. I was so honored when we started to discuss working together for the American Flowers Week artwork. I wanted to honor that time (when I grew flowers) and how special it was for me. And even though I don't have that business anymore, I do have such fond memories of that time and I really am grateful for it.

AFW: Your illustration captures that sense of community! The gathering of different growers and their diverse appearances is really symbolic. We're hearing really positive responses!

AL: I wanted it to reflect how society ought to be represented, frankly. I tried to draw some of the people as gender-neutral; I have the hippie guy with the peace sign on his shirt. I'm not really sure who the child belongs to. It was all intentional.

AFW: What was your technique to make this piece?

AL: It is a digital illustration, all done in Procreate. I usually start with some reference imagery. I drew the background and land first; then the people; and then the flowers and the little details. I have to say that the flowers were actually the hardest -- the center bouquet had so many different iterations. But finally, I landed on the sunflowers. Who doesn't love sunflowers?

AFW: Yes, it is the quintessential American flower! And by the way, although this is a two-dimensional drawing, there are layers of texture throughout it!

AL: Even if I'm drawing an owl or a bat, I love texture, so I try to put that in.

AFW: Thank you, so much, April!

PHOTOGRAPHY BY CRYSTAL WHITEAKER

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