Artwork Page for Bouquet

Details / Information for Bouquet

Bouquet

c. 1680–95
(French, c. 1636–1699)
Catalogue raisonné
Robert-Dumesnil Vol. III.231-232
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Seventeenth-century botanical illustrators were stimulated by a surge of interest in their subject. While in the mid-16th century only 500 plants were known, less than a century later that number had grown to 6,000. A passion for cultivating beautiful rather than useful plants took hold, and formal gardens with carefully arranged flower beds based on embroidery designs supplemented varieties of local plants with foreign samples. Exotic flowers became available in Europe as the Dutch founded colonies in the East and West Indies, South America, and India. While fabulous royal gardens were planted in France at Fontainebleau and the Louvre, for instance, in England “a whole nation went mad about flowers.”
A vertical hand-colored etching features a lush bouquet against a cream background. Large, ruffled orange flowers with sun-like yellow centers anchor the arrangement. To the upper left, a long stalk of blue bell-shaped blossoms curves gracefully. Small white flowers and jagged green leaves fill the gaps between the main blooms. A thin rectangular border encloses the scene, with cursive text at the bottom left. The composition balances delicate linework with vibrant, warm colors.

Bouquet

c. 1680–95

Jean-Baptiste I Monnoyer

(French, c. 1636–1699)
France, 17th century

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