Malcolm Ian Howie (1900âÂÂ1936) was an Australian self-taught commercial and botanical watercolour artist and Methodist local preacher.
From the age of 16, Howie was unable to walk due to Spinal muscular atrophy. He was often accompanied on his preaching engagements by the botanist James Hamlyn Willis, who had married Malcolm's sister, Mavis Eileen Howie. An accomplished debater, he wrote "verse and short plays," and entered the Royal South Street Society literary competition in 1933, winning second place.
By 1926 Howie was employed as a commercial painter, supplying artwork featuring birds and wildflowers, for calendars and suedework. By 1931, James Hamlyn Willis and Ethel McLennan had encouraged Howie to expand his repertoire to include fungi, and his paintings increasingly appeared in scientific publications. Approximately 200 watercolours of fungi, produced between 1931 and 1935, have survived. Paintings by Howie are held in the State Botanical Collection of Victoria, Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria. A further 84 paintings are held by the University of Melbourne Herbarium.
Howie's watercolour illustrations of fungi and ferns were published in the following works:
His work has been posthumously exhibited, particularly in Melbourne. Exhibitions include:
Howie has also been cited as an inspiration for The Red Room Company poet Bonny Cassidy.