Description
“Devil’s Claw- Proboscidea Althaeifolia” | Impressionist Floral Painting
- 14×11 in.
- Oil on Canvas, 2019
- Unframed
About the Artist:
As a young man I was always outside observing my surroundings. I graduated from Elsenburg College Stellenbosch in South Africa with degrees in Agriculture, Horticulture, and Oenology. I first specialized in growing roses and fruit trees in the Eastern Cape region where I taught local farm workers to play rugby and established a rugby league while they taught me how to speak their native tongue, Xhosa.
I traveled the world extensively and then settled in Tucson, Arizona where I live with my wife Sarah and two sons James and Gordon. Sarah, Yale educated in art history, finally put the palette knife in my hand. I am self-taught and express what comes naturally to me. My paintings are full of movement, deep and rich. I let the moment, mood, and my education of the subject, inspire my art.
About Notes:
Scientific Name: Proboscidea althaeifolia
Common Name: Devil’s Claw
Also Called: Devil’s Claw, Double Claw, Red Devil’s Claw, Unicorn Plant (Spanish: Cuernitos)
Size: Up to 2 ½ feet or more.
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Martyniaceae
Genus: Proboscidea
Species: P. althaeifolia
I chose to paint the species because of it’s similarities to so many other flowers the first two that comes to mind being that of the orchard and even the Hibiscus like petals.Yet neither of those two would be abled to withstand the heat of the desert and the heat of the sand in the middle of summer. Proboscidea althaeifolia is a species of flowering plant known by the common names desert unicorn-plant and yellow-flowered devil’s claw. It is native to the desert southwest of the United States, where it grows in sandy habitat and blooms during the hot summer. This is a perennial herb growing from a thick, tuberlike yellow root. The stem is decumbent, creeping along the ground. The shiny leaves have rounded, oval, or roughly triangular blades up to 7 centimeters long which are deeply lobed and wavy along the edges. The inflorescence is an array of many showy, fragrant, bell-shaped flowers with five lobes flaring several centimeters wide. The flower is yellow to orange or apricot with an intricate pattern of speckles and streaks, its lower lobe lined with a nectar guide. The fruit is a large seed pod many centimeters long, a cylindrical body tapering into a very long, thin, curving tail. As the fruit dries the tail cracks open and splits into two hooked, claw-like halves. These hard, dry fruits were used as tools by local Native Americans
Leaves: Green, fuzzy, large, nearly 6 inches wide, ovate or triangular, 3 or more lobes nearly entire to shallowly sinuately-lobed.
Flowering Season: April to October.
Elevation: 1,000 to 5,000 feet,.
Habitat Preferences: Plains, mesas, roadsides and disturbed dry places.
Recorded Range: Doubleclaw is found in the southwest United States in; AZ, CA, NM, NV, TX and UT.
To quote the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum: “The variety hohokamiana is a cultivar developed by the O’odham. It differs from the wild type in two important ways. The cultivar has claws up to a foot (30 cm) long with softer fibers. The black fibers in the claws are used in basket-making, especially by the Tohono O’odham. The longer, softer fiber in the domesticated claws are easier to work with. Secondly, the seeds of the cultivar are white instead of black, and lack germination inhibitors. While seeds of the wild type must lie in the ground for a couple of years before they will germinate, the white seeds sprout as soon as they get wet in hot weather and are thus easier to cultivate. This is one of the few plants domesticated north of Mexico, and this seems to have been accomplished only late in the last century. There is a theory that the introduction of cattle was the catalyst. Cattle will eat devil’s claw plants, and O’odham women may have been forced to save seeds and grow them in more protected areas than previously. Among the saved seeds was a variant with longer claws and white seeds. The cultivar is now grown by more than 25 native cultures, some of whom live far beyond the natural range of the wild devil’s claw.”
At first glance one would never believe how tough the flower really is.