TIMELESS
Floral Landscapes by Suzan Osborn
July 18 – October 12

This summer, local artist Suzan Osborn returns with a captivating new collection of oil paintings inspired by her time spent at the Garden. Her luminous floral landscapes celebrate the color, movement, and quiet beauty of New England Botanic Garden, revealing fresh perspectives on cherished spaces and seasonal blooms. Rendered in Osborn’s warm, expressive style, each work invites you to step into scenes shaped by nature and brought vividly to life on canvas. 

This exhibit is included with general admission.

Paintings from the exhibition will be available for purchase. Check back soon for the artwork pricelist.

  • Visitors in sun hats during a fine day, Oil painting by Suzan Osborn
  • Golden apples on an ancient tree, Oil painting by Suzan Osborn
  • Red bud tree in the Cottage Garden, Oil painting by Suzan Osborn
  • Lavender fringed tulips, Oil painting by Suzan Osborn
  • View Down the Daffodil Hill, Oil painting by Suzan Osborn

ASK THE ARTIST! 

Meet artist Suzan Osborn in person on Thursdays from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and learn more about the inspiration behind her work. This special opportunity invites visitors to ask questions and connect with the artist while experiencing her vibrant oil paintings up close.

Suzan Osborn is a contemporary landscape painter whose work celebrates the beauty, atmosphere, and changing seasons of the natural world. Working primarily in oils, she is known for her luminous floral landscapes and expressive use of color, which invite viewers into scenes that feel both intimate and expansive. 

Her artistic journey spans several decades, a timeline sparked at age eight when she painted her very first oil painting of a hummingbird visiting a cactus flower. This lifelong passion deepened during her high school years, where she captured Virginia landscapes, trees, and floral compositions utilizing vibrant, Impressionist-inspired colors. Osborn’s formal artistic evolution continued at the College of William and Mary, where she was introduced to acrylic paints and experimented with large, free-flowing imagery. Later, while teaching art at Gould Academy in Bethel, Maine, she continued to embrace en plein air painting, capturing her vegetable garden against a backdrop of apple trees on a memorable late summer day. 

Upon returning home to Harvard, Massachusetts, Osborn switched back to oil paints and discovered her true creative mission: capturing “garden portraits.” This definitive focus led to numerous color-filled, often commissioned, depictions of iconic spaces. Notable portraits include the Stevens-Coolidge House & Gardens, a glimpse inside the historic Lyman Estate greenhouse, and Celia Thaxter’s famous garden on Appledore Island.  

Among her most memorable creative milestones, remain three distinct painting trips to Monet’s glorious garden in Giverny, France. During each visit, she painted quietly during the peaceful hours reserved for artists after the tourists had left for the day, later translating those sketches and photographs into about 20 rich oil paintings back in her studio. This deeply personal collection was featured in solo exhibitions at the Fivesparks gallery in Harvard and at the Bolton Library. Even today, viewing these pieces recalls the soaring emotions she experienced while working in Monet’s historic garden. 

Osborn’s broader body of work has been widely exhibited at prestigious venues, including the College of William and Mary Tricentennial, Concord Art, the Francesca Anderson Gallery, and Gallery Twist in Lexington. Committed to local arts communities, she participates in the Artists in Residence event at FiveSparks, and held a multi-year tenure at the Skinner/Bonhams auction house. Her illustrative talent was also featured on a larger scale through nine full-page garden illustrations, including the cover art, for author John H. Mitchell’s book An Eden of Sorts

For several decades, Osborn has found a profound sense of peace and inspiration visiting the New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill. Now, she is deeply honored to present her paintings of these very grounds for the second time in the Milton Gallery. Through this current collection, Osborn offers fresh, timeless perspectives on beloved garden spaces, translating her personal history and experience of the landscape into richly observed, evocative paintings that bring the Garden vividly to life. 

Each year, as garden favorites like daffodils and daylilies blossom at their appointed time, I find myself feeling timelessly connected to blooms that delighted me in the past.  

This sense of timelessness inspired me to create the pictorial records of this exhibit. This collection features impressions rather than precise botanical renderings. I have visited and painted the gardens at New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill throughout many years and have collected a library of photos from which to fashion my paintings. While composing a painting, I may find images of the same garden space in the same blooming season but different years and transplant a flower from the past into my garden portrait to create a work of art that transcends an exact moment in time. 

I follow the thread of my own self-taught artistic style and have always appreciated the sense-stirring colors and expressive brush strokes of Impressionist painting.  

Gardening and painting are my intertwined passions, so my frequently muttered mantra is

“When I garden, I am painting, and when I paint, I am gardening.” 

And I must say, when I do either…. I feel suspended in timelessness.

FAQs

Timeless, Floral Landscapes by Suzan Osborn will be on display at New England Botanic Garden in the Milton Gallery from July 18 through October 12. You can view the exhibit during general admission hours, 10 a.m. to ­­5 p.m. daily and during Extended Summer Evening hours.  This exhibit is included with general admission. Click here to reserve.   

Yes, all artwork displayed in Timeless will be on sale for the duration of the exhibition. Visitors can make purchases in person at the Garden. Purchased artwork will remain on display for the duration of the exhibition and must be picked up by the purchaser in person after the exhibit has ended. Check back soon for the artwork price list.