Jessica Rosemary Shepherd FLS (born October 1984) is a painter, artist, publisher and botanist who works under the names of Úrsula Romero and Inky Leaves.
Early career
After attending Steyning Grammar School,[1] Shepherd studied for a BSc in botany at Plymouth University[2] and was awarded the Eden Project Prize for her thesis in which she initiated the restoration of Plymouth's historic Drakes Place Gardens.[3][4] During her time at university Shepherd dedicated time to researching and cataloguing the 19th Century Thomas Bruges Flower (1817–1899) herbarium at Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery alongside her studies.[4]
Following her attendance at Edinburgh Shepherd was funded by the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation to conduct two years of research into the 18th Century St. Aubyn (1758–1839) herbarium and mineral collection at Plymouth City Museum.[8][9][10][11] Meanwhile she was also employed by the University to continue her work on improving the campus and was the curator of the Muirhead Herbarium.[12][13]
In 2010 Shepherd was employed by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and was positioned in the Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art.[14][15] During this time she freelanced as an illustrator for scientific journals and books[16][17][18] whilst developing her own painting techniques and delivered several talks about the Marianne North Gallery.[19]
On 16 February 2017 Shepherd held her first solo exhibition at Abbott and Holder in London and in conjunction published her first book titled ‘Leafscape’ featuring her collection of watercolour paintings on leaves.[28] For the collection, Shepherd worked in collaboration with musician Hoodlum Priest (Derek Thompson) to produce a soundtrack which was released by Concrete Music Publishing.[29]
In late 2017, inspired by Novalis' unfinished Bildungsroman 'Heinrich von Ofterdingen', Shepherd began her next project on the Blue Flower.[30] In 2018 Shepherd launched INK Quarterly (INKQ) – a collaborative art publication that acts as a stage for thinkers and artists to talk freely about their ideas and practice for an educated audience.[31] 2018 also saw the birth of the Inky Leaves podcasting channel which, via a series of talks and interviews, discusses and promotes botanical art.[32]
Personal life
Shepherd was a model and muse for well known ceramic artist, printmaker and painter Eric James Mellon between 2004 and 2006, frequently appearing in his work wearing hats.[33][34][35] She has also been a model for other well known artists including Piers Ottey, Gym Hamala[36] and Youth and spent a year studying the history of painting under the tuition of YBA artist Nick Fudge.[37]
Exhibitions
July 2023 - 'Beauty in Individualism - Collection of works by women artists of the 20th and 21st Centuries', Stephen Ongpin Fine Art, London, UK[37]
April 2014 - RHS Botanical Art Show, London, UK[48][49]
May 2013 – Natural Selection, Espacio Gallery, London, UK[50]
April 2009 – Darwin to Digital, Cube³ Gallery, Plymouth, UK[51]
Sound
Thompson, D. and Shepherd, J. R. (2017) Leafscape [CD], Concrete Music Publishing, UK
Publications
Shepherd, J. R. (2017) Leafscape [Hardback], Inky Leaves Publishing, Chichester, UK. ISBN9781788086660
Illustrations by Shepherd
Patel Ellis, S. (2018) The Botanical Bible, William Collins-Harper. London, UK. pp. 320–321. ISBN978-0008262273
Wendell, B. (2018) L’unico mondo che abbiamo, Piano B edizioni, Prato, Italy. ISBN9788893710329 (front cover)
Morris, H. (2013) Tree Pruning: A Modern Approach, International Dendrology Society Yearbook, pp. 209–229
Thurstan, M. and Martin, R. (2012) Exotic Botanical Illustration with the Eden Project, Batsford Ltd. ISBN9781849940313
Morris, H. (2011) Tree Pruning: A Short History, International Dendrology Society Yearbook 2010, pp. 217–225
Essays
Shepherd, J. R. (2018) INK Quarterly, Inky Leaves Publishing (editorial)
Shepherd, J. R. (2009) Bringing a Herbarium to Life at Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery, NatSCA News, Issue 17, pp. 43–51[52]
Shepherd, J. R. (2009) The Collector, Geoscientist, Vol. 19, No. 12, pp. 6–9
Shepherd, J. R. (2009) St. Aubyn Mineral Collection (c 1794–2010) at Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery, Geological Curator, Vol.9, No. 2, pp. 45–56[53]
References
^"Pupil's work pays off at show". West Sussex County Times. 20 June 2003. p. 20.
^Lewis, C. L. E.; Knell, S. J. (2009). The Making of the Geological Society of London – Special Publication no 317. Geological Society of London. ISBN9781862392779.
^Sherwood, Shirley (2020). The Shirley Sherwood Collection: Modern Masterpieces of Botanical Art. London, UK: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. ISBN978-1842466933.