Pauleen’s gold medal botanical illustration

BOTANICAL artist Pauleen Trim grew up in the beautiful, peaceful Winterborne valley south of Blandford, in an area full of wildflowers, plants and trees. She still lives, with her husband Jim, in Winterborne Whitechurch surrounded by friends, family – and that beautiful landscape of fields, hedges, trees and gentle hills.

From childhood, she had always loved painting and drawing, but it was only when she retired, after many years teaching a wide range of art courses, that she really fell in love with nature.

That love, and her remarkable talent as an artist, which earned her membership of the exclusive Society of Botanical Artists, have together brought her not one but two coveted RHS (Royal Horticultural Society) gold medals at the prestigious RHS botanical art exhibition.

In 2021, one of her suite of gold-medal-winning illustrations of six trees – a delicate botanical depiction of an ash – was chosen as Best in Show. This year, she again won gold with another tree series, in the RHS show at the Saatchi gallery.

From childhood, Pauleen (the unusual spelling was a mistake when her birth was registered!) knew she was keen on art – at one point she imagined a career in fashion design. She was offered a place at a leading London art school but didn’t take it up and instead went to work for the then Dorset County Council. She took an ONC in public administration, and went on to marry Jim and have two children. Her father, Robert Maidment, was a builder who built his own home, and Pauleen and Jim’s.

She carried on painting and joined the Blandford Art Society, where she was one of a small group taking a diploma in fine art. Towards the end of this course she was asked if she would consider teaching, and after taking an Adult Education course at Ferndown she stepped in to run a leisure painters course at Bovington. She moved on to an initially temporary post at Bournemouth and Poole college at the Lansdowne, where she taught art to students on other courses (including floristry and hairdressing). This became a permanent job for 25 years and she eventually specialised in theatre make-up and costume design.

Pauleen is constantly learning – while teaching, she took a City & Guilds course in textiles and currently is one of a small group who have just visited Transylvania to learn about and paint the uniquely unspoiled plants, flowers and trees of this region, where farming follows a pre-chemical agricultural cycle. She is also an accomplished miniaturist, and has been a member of the Hilliard Society of Miniature Art for about 30 years.

After she retired 12 years ago she found some paintings of flowers and plants that she had done in the 1970s and 80s and this reignited her interest. She took a course in botanical illustration at Kingston Maurward College. “I just thought “Wow! I fell in love with looking at nature,” she says.

She joined the South West Society of Botanical Artists, went on to do a diploma in the medium, and was advised by a teacher to start exhibiting. She submitted some work to the Society of Botanical Artists and was accepted as a member in 2018 after having five works accepted in two consecutive years. It is a complicated and demanding process – nowadays you have to submit a set number of paintings which go before a panel, who decide if the artist is to be offered SBA Fellowship status.

There is a similarly rigorous process for the annual RHS exhibition. The artist submits five paintings (professional quality life-size prints) which go before a selection panel. If the work is deemed to be silver standard (or above) you have five years in which to paint your six exhibition paintings. Once the six paintings are completed, you apply for a place in the RHS annual art show. The paintings are taken to the Saatchi Gallery and framed. When hung, they are judged by an RHS panel and the awards are given. The level of award is based on all six paintings, so to attain a gold medal all six have to be of gold standard, and if one is not, the whole exhibit award is based on the lowest standard painting.

In 2021, Pauleen submitted six tree paintings including the ash illustration – all won gold, and the ash was chosen as Best in Show. This year’s six, exhibited at the Saatchi Gallery, were also trees, and all won gold. For future SBA/RHS exhibitions Pauleen aims to show other botanical paintings of plants or flowers. The illustrations here show the award-winning ash illustration, one of the 2025 gold winners and some examples of her non-tree work.

Pauleen does not have a website but she does have an Instagram account – pauleentrim8 – where many of her works are exhibited.

Pictured are Pauleen’s 2021 Best in Show illustration of an ash tree (Fraxinus excelsior); one of her 2025 gold medal winning paintings, Prunus Spinoza; and a non-tree subject, Amaryllis Beginning and End.