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#rachelruysch — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #rachelruysch, aggregated by home.social.

  1. "Vase of Flowers with an Ear of Corn," Rachel Ruysch, 1742.

    We can always count on our old friend Rachel Ruysch to see out the week in style. Here Ruysch, regarded as one of the greatest still life artists of all time, gives us a bouquet of flowers that likely couldn't exist in real life....as they wouldn't be blooming at the same time. The roses and tulips and forget-me-nots all belong to different parts of the spring, and that ear of corn, with its dry husk, is definitely late summer.

    Still, Ruysch depicts them all with loving precision, and creates an image of beauty that pleases the eye and rests the mind. Heaven bless you, Rachel Ruysch.

    Happy Flower Friday!

    From the National Gallery of Ireland.

    #Art #RachelRuysch #FlowerFriday #StillLife #DutchGoldenAge #WomenArtists

  2. "Flower Still Life," Rachel Ruysch, c. 1716-20.

    Here's our old friend Rachel Ruysch (1664-1750) with another one of her lovely floral still lifes.

    The flowers here include poppies, roses, carnations, and I think I see some tulips as well. There's a bee, a moth, and a caterpillar visible as well, and maybe a few other small creatures. Some of the flowers are drooping, and some leaves are brown and have been nibble on by insects.

    Ruysch, the daughter of a scientist, depicted flowers and insects with great precision and detail. There's a lot of realism in the individual flowers, but the overall painting is not realistic, as these flowers would not be in bloom at the same time!

    I won't go on about her life, having talked about her before, but she had a long and successful career and achieved greater fame and wealth than many other painters of her time, and even today she is regarded as one of the greatest and most talented still life artists of any sex, of any era. All hail Rachel Ruysch!

    Happy Flower Friday!

    From the Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, OH.

    #Art #RachelRuysch #DutchGoldenAge #FlowerFriday #StillLife #Floral #AllTimeGreatPainters #WomenArtists #ILoveYouRachelRuysch
    #WomensHistory #Herstory

  3. "Tree Trunk Surrounded by Flowers, Butterflies, and Animals," Rachel Ruysch, 1685.

    Here's our old friend Rachel Ruysch (1664-1750), one of the greatest still life artists of all time.

    Here we've got an arrangement of flowers around a tree trunk in a wild landscape that can be glimpsed in the upper left. Seeming to sprout from the trunk are roses, lilies, and poppies, amongst others, but these are cultivated flowers, not wild ones. Still, it's a pleasing image. A few butterflies can be seen, and by a mushroom at the bottom right there's a lizard, and a snail crawls away at the bottom left.

    Everything is done with great precision and dedication. Even the mushroom at the bottom right looks real. I like to think that she loved what she did.

    This is actually a pretty large painting for a still life of the period (32 by 38 inches) which indicates the popularity of her work.

    I love sharing Ruysch's work. She depicted her subjects with loving precision, and she lived a rich, full life, enjoying success and acclaim. When so many women artists get forgotten or their work attributed to male artists, Ruysch shows us that women artists can (and should) have the same respect as men.

    Happy Flower Friday!

    From the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam.

    #Art #RachelRuysch #DutchGoldenAge #StillLife #FlowerFriday

  4. "Still Life with Rose Branch, Beetle, and Bee," Rachel Ruysch, 1741.

    An artist of the Dutch Golden Age, Ruysch (1664-1750) was meticulous about signing and dating her works, making her one of the best documented artists of her time. Her level of skill and talent has led to her being praised as one of the all-time great still life painters.

    The daughter of a scientist/teacher, she had many examples of plants, insects, minerals, and animals to work with. By the age of 18 she was selling her own work under her own name, and her career spanned six decades. When so many women artists went unknown or neglected, she fetched top prices for her work, earning more than Rembrandt did. She was respected and acclaimed in her lifetime and for a long time after her death.

    She married a portrait artist, Juriaen Pool, and bore him ten children...and yet she kept on painting, earning more than he did. She even managed to outlive him.

    Painted when she was in her mid-70s, this lovely picture shows no sign of her slowing down. The flowers and insects all show her attention to detail and scientific accuracy. One gets a sense that she loved what she was doing.

    Happy Flower Friday!

    From the Kunstmuseum Basel, Switzerland.

    #Art #RachelRuysch #WomenArtists #DutchGoldenAge #StillLife #FlowerFriday

  5. "Still Life with Flowers on a Marble Tabletop," Rachel Ruysch, 1716.

    Rachel Ruysch's still lifes are always worth revisiting. I've talked about her before, so I won't repeat myself, except to say the basics: She was a painter of florals and still lifes who was enormously popular and charged high prices in her lifetime, and is also the best-documented female artist of her time, thanks her to habit of adding her age to her signature on all her paintings. She is regarded as one of the greatest still life artists of all time.

    Here we have a lovely bouquet with roses, pansies, irises, calendula, dianthus, and others, with a few insects buzzing about or landing on the petals. Her father was a teacher of anatomy and botany, so she learned to look at flowers and insects closely and examine their structure, to recreate them realistically on the canvas.

    A perfect painting for Flower Friday!

    From the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.

    #Art #DutchGoldenAge #RachelRuysch #WomenArtists #FlowerFriday