Lulie Wallace’s Floral Portraits and Designs

Charleston-based artist Lulie Wallace paints bold bouquets, opening up a world of entrepreneurial adventures
lulie wallace paintings

Anthropologie understands the allure of flowers. The creative home and fashion emporium revives interest in botanically-themed art by cultivating the work of contemporary, nature-centric women. Many of these young artists, in one way or another, are continuing a long tradition that includes Dutch master Rachel Ruysch’s ravishing, early 18th-century insect-bedecked floral still lifes and Bloomsbury artist Vanessa Bell’s colorful poppies. Among the new generation is Charleston, South Carolina’s Lulie Wallace. Her paintings are known for vibrant color combinations, a keen sense of pattern, and stylized blossoms juxtaposed with stripes and geometrics.

National attention from design blogs, notably Grace Bonney’s highly influential Design*Sponge, put Wallace on the radar of Anthropologie and sister store Urban Outfitters, the artist says. First, Urban Outfitters emailed with a proposal to reproduce and sell two of her paintings as large-scale murals. Soon after, Anthropologie made an offer to buy a selection of her original works for the store’s online House & Home department. Having previously seen fellow Southern painters including Shelley Hesse and Rebecca Rebouche collaborate with Anthro, it was a wish fulfilled for Wallace when she spied her own acrylic on birch pieces in the July 2012 catalogue.

lulie wallace paintings
Wallace’s flower portraits on the wall in her studio

Her latest venture is a fabric collection. The idea came about serendipitously when Charleston-based Stitch, the graphic design team responsible for the artist’s website, requested she paint some of her signature blooms isolated on a clean white background. “I had a great time arranging the flowers  within new parameters. The end result looked a lot like printed fabric, so I thought I was on to something,” Wallace explains.  Although she is associated with florals, the collection will also feature complementary geometrics. And she is committed to manufacturing the line in the U.S., specifically the South.

lulie wallace designs
The artist’s fabric line features not only botanicals but fun, abstract stripes and patterns. Courtesy of Stitch Design Co.

Growing up in Columbus, Georgia, Wallace connected to nature. Her grandfather lovingly tended his own rose garden and kept her grandmother surrounded by fragrant, freshly cut stems. But she really began to focus on flowers during her last semester at the College of Charleston as she completed her BFA in painting. While she acknowledges downtown Charleston’s famous gardens, she points out that many remain ensconced behind those iconic ornamental iron gates—in short, not typically open to the public. Interestingly, local weddings—gorgeous Lowcountry happenings done up by Tara Guérard of Soirée and other designers—are what opened her eyes to the creative possibilities of flowers.

Wedding bouquet that served as inspiration for a Lulie Wallace floral painting
This gorgeous bridal bouquet was the subject for Wallace’s exuberant portrait, "Flowers for Annie." Photo by Leah Powell
floral painting by artist lulie wallace
"Flowers for Annie" by Lulie Wallace

“Charleston is one of the most popular wedding destinations in the U.S. There’s always an inspirational flower-filled event taking place around the corner,” Wallace observes. With her enthusiasm for weddings, it’s not surprising that she enjoys commissions to paint bridal bouquets. Working on a piece imbued with such personal meaning for the client is gratifying, she notes. And, because she still comes across less familiar flowers, the projects offer an opportunity to expand her floral repertoire.

Lulie Wallace Paintings
First inspired by the blooms in Lowcountry weddings, Lulie Wallace paints fanciful, stylized portraits of flowers.

When she feels the need for an artistic critique, Wallace pops out of her private studio at Charleston’s nonprofit Redux Contemporary Art Center. Home to roughly 30 other diverse artists, Redux is part of Charleston’s second artistic renaissance. Founded in 2002 by College of Charleston grads, Redux provides emerging artists better opportunities to create and exhibit their work.

At the time of her own graduation, Wallace was skeptical she could earn a living as an artist. In fact, she allowed herself just three months to gauge the public interest in her paintings. If she received a positive response, she told herself, she would forge on. Today, as fans pin the deft mixes of chartreuse, lavender, persimmon, and gray in her graphic bouquets across Pinterest boards and blog and re-blog on Tumblr pages, she feels she chose the right path.


By Courtney Barnes | Photography by Sully Sullivan

See more from Lulie Wallace on her website and Instagram.

Flower Magazine, Winter 2013

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