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The eponymous animals in the centre are a great tit (top), a nine-primaried oscine (bottom) and a peacock butterfly. [1] It was most recently exhibited in the "Sélectionner, collectionner, classer" section of the Louvre's own exhibition Les Choses. Une histoire de la nature morte from 12 October 2022 to 23 January 2023. [2]
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on cs.wikipedia.org Jan van Kessel starší; Usage on el.wikipedia.org Γιαν φαν Κέσσελ ο πρεσβύτερος
A floral diagram is a schematic cross-section through a young flower. [1] It may be also defined as “projection of the flower perpendicular to its axis”. [3] It usually shows the number of floral parts, [Note 2] their sizes, relative positions and fusion.
The first plates show two views of a Dutch garden. In 1616 was published Jardin d'hyver, [31] or Cabinet des fleurs, containing in 26 elegies the rarest and most signal flowers of the most beautiful flowerbeds. Illustrated with excellent figures representing the most beautiful flowers of domestic gardens in their natural state (in particular ...
Butterflies and Poppies is an artwork by Vincent Van Gough, Vincent completed the artwork in 1889. Butterflies and poppies was painted onto a canvas with oil paints. Vincent used a lot of layers in Butterflies and Poppies to create an almost textile-like feel. Using very fine brush strokes also helped to create this illusion.
Flowers in a glass vase on a balustrade with colunnade: 1689: 79:25: San Diego Museum of Art: San Diego, CA Spray of flowers with insects and butterflies on a marble slab: 1690s: 36.6 cm x 30.4 cm: PD.38-1975: Fitzwilliam Museum: Cambridge Posy of flowers, with a red admiral butterfly, on a marble ledge: ca. 1695: 34.5 cm x 27.3 cm: Private ...
The drawings were decorative and not all were drawn based on observation. Some of the flowers in the three-volume series appear to be based on drawings by Nicolas Robert and her stepfather Jacob Marrel. Merian included insects among the flowers; again she may not have observed them all herself, and some may be copies of drawings by Jacob Hoefnagel.
Vere Temple was born at Boreham Manor, two miles east of Warminster, Wiltshire to parents Grenville and Katherine Temple. Her father was a man of "private means". [2] She showed an early aptitude for art, and her mother compiled an album of her drawings, the earliest of which was dated December 1901 and in which "it is possible to spot evidence of the extraordinary 'eye' which was in due ...