Sandstone Coaster - Rachel Ruysch

Sandstone Coaster - Rachel Ruysch "Flower Still Life"

Sticker Set - Rachel Ruysch: Nature Into Art

Sticker Set - Rachel Ruysch: Nature Into Art

Journal - Rachel Ruysch - "Flower Still Life"

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SKU
033053
Journal - Rachel Ruysch - "Flower Still Life"

TMA Exclusive Product

Notebook Size: 6 x 8 1/4 in.

Lined pages.

Capture your thoughts, sketches, and inspirations in this elegant hardcover journal featuring a striking detail from Rachel Ruysch's "Flower Still Life".

With lined, high-quality pages, this journal is perfect for writing or creative brainstorming. A sophisticated keepsake for art lovers and an exclusive companion to Rachel Ruysch: Nature into Art at the Toledo Museum of Art.


Rachel Ruysch (Dutch, 1664-1750), Flower Still Life, about 1726, oil on canvas, 29 ¾ x 23 7/8 in. (75.6 x 60.6 cm), Purchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, 1956.57

Against a dark background, in the style of flower painting from the second half of the seventeenth century, Rachel Ruysch composed a lush floral arrangement, including many flowers that would never actually bloom at the same time. Among this array of blossoming and wilting plants, a closer look reveals caterpillars crawling along the stem of a flower and browning leaves riddled with holes made by hungry insects. Such vivid details suggest the fragility of the arrangement, even alluding to the fact that beauty fades and all living things must die.

Ruysch was the daughter of a professor of anatomy and botany, and likely became familiar with plants through him. By age fifteen she was studying with the still-life artist Willem van Aelst. From this background of scientific and artistic studies, she learned to capture the essence of nature in her own flower paintings. The most famous female painter in the Golden Age of Dutch art, Ruysch enjoyed an international reputation over a career that lasted almost seven decades.
2025