Artwork Page for Collection of Flowers and Fruits Painted after Nature: Bouquet of Foxglove, Clematis, Pansy, Peony, Poppy, and Yellow Day Lily

Details / Information for Collection of Flowers and Fruits Painted after Nature: Bouquet of Foxglove, Clematis, Pansy, Peony, Poppy, and Yellow Day Lily

Collection of Flowers and Fruits Painted after Nature: Bouquet of Foxglove, Clematis, Pansy, Peony, Poppy, and Yellow Day Lily

1805
Credit Line
Catalogue raisonné
Dunthorne 227.229.7e
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

By the mid-17th century, there was a surge of interest in beautiful, exotic plants and formal royal gardens. At Fountainebleau and the Louvre, the gardens were filled with flowers from far-away places, such as the Near East, India, the East and West Indies, and South America. In 1735 Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) invented the first scientific classification system for 7,700 plants. As a result, accuracy as well as artistic skill were required for the numerous portfolios of botanical prints popular with gardeners and those involved with the decorative arts. In these lavish productions, some of the color is printed but the remainder is added with watercolor, giving the illusion of transparency, luminosity, and the delicacy characteristic of flowers. Stipple was a technique developed in England from the 1760s. A point is used to build up a mass of flicks and dots to create a wide range of tones.
A vertically oriented color print on cream paper depicts a bundle of flowers with fine, speckled shading and a poppy in the center, a red flower with a black interior. A slim petal cluster of two peonies gather below the poppy, and purple-gray bell-shaped flowers dangle from a foxglove stem above. Green-gray leaves and smaller orange, purple, yellow, and white flowers surround this central cluster, the bare stems extending in the lower third of the print.

Collection of Flowers and Fruits Painted after Nature: Bouquet of Foxglove, Clematis, Pansy, Peony, Poppy, and Yellow Day Lily

1805

Louis Charles Ruotte, Jean Louis Prévost, Jean Louis Prévost

(French, 1754–1806)
France, late 18th-early 19th Century

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