August 2022

Roberts’ creative process starts with a high-powered macro camera lens, revealing details not noticeable to the naked eye.“Some of the flowers are as tiny as a pinhead and others are ten inches across,” she says.“It’s so surprising when you look at some of those tiny flowers and they have as much complexity of pattern and design as magnificent cactus flowers or lilies or roses—any of those flowers that are more recognizable.” Take the humble California buckwheat, a native plant that produces a cluster of tiny white flowers popular with pollinators.“Every little flower is complex and unique,” says Roberts.“And it has this little knot where the stamen and pistil come together—you just can’t see that.” Even the most minute details are magnified in saturated color. Stretched to the edges of canvases, every bloom gets its day in the sun. Roberts, who learned all about her plants as she went along (their origins, their early uses, their migration patterns, etc.) says it’s difficult to pick out the pesky weeds from the prize winners. “Nature is remarkable,” she says.“As humans, we couldn’t possibly come up with the sense of invention and design that you’ll find in nature. We give ourselves way too much credit. We’re influenced as artists, at least I am, by the variety and incredible way in which these shapes and colors come together. I feel like I learned so much more.”

33 SAN DIEGO MAGAZINE

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