Sunday, April 26, 2026

Art (Arboreal)

Samuel Palmer
Oak Trees, Lullingstone Park
1828
watercolor, gouache and ink on paper
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa


Lady Augusta Mostyn
Oak Tree, Eridge Park, Sussex
before 1857
albumen silver print
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Henri-Joseph Harpignies
Oaks at Château Renard
1875
oil on canvas
McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas

Jan van Goyen
The Blasted Oak, or, The Fortune Teller
1638
oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux

Filippo Napoletano (Filippo Angeli)
Figures in Landscape with Blasted Tree
before 1629
drawing
British Museum

David Armstrong
Tree, Potsdam
1993
C-print
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Christo (Christo Javacheff)
Wrapped Trees Project for Champs Élysées
1969
collage and mixed media on paper
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Paul Flandrin
Oak Trees at the Villa Borghese
1835
drawing
British Museum

Robert Glenn Ketchum
Patriarch Oak
1993
C-print
Akron Art Museum, Ohio

Adolphe Martial Potémont
Old Oaks at Bas Bréau
ca. 1865
etching and drypoint
Art Institute of Chicago

Childe Hassam
Easthampton Elms in May
1925
etching
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Francis Frith
Largest of the Cedars, Mount Lebanon
ca. 1857-60
albumen silver print
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Georgia O'Keeffe
Cedar Tree with Lavender Hills
1937
oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Anne Brigman
The Dying Cedar
1906
platinum print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Robert Swain Gifford
Trees and Meadow
ca. 1885
oil on canvas
Brooklyn Museum

Birge Harrison
Tunnel of Trees in Winter
before 1929
oil on canvas
(sold at Bonham's, New York in 2020)
private collection

Edward John Hughes
Trees, Savary Island
1953
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Long John Brown & Little Mary Bell

Little Mary Bell had a Fairy in a Nut,
Long John Brown had the Devil in his Gut;
Long John Brown lov'd Little Mary Bell,
And the Fairy drew the Devil into the Nut-shell.

Her Fairy skip'd out & her Fairy skip'd in;
He laugh'd at the Devil saying "Love is a Sin."
The Devil he raged & the Devil he was wroth,
And the Devil enter'd into the Young Man's broth.

He was soon in the Gut of the loving Young Swain,
For John eat & drank to drive away Love's pain;
But all he could do he grew thinner & thinner,
Tho' he eat & drank as much as ten Men for his dinner. 

Some said he had a Wolf in his stomach day & night,
Some said he had the Devil, & they guess'd right;
The Fairy skip'd about in his Glory, Joy & Pride,
And he laugh'd at the Devil till poor John Brown died.

Then the Fairy skip'd out of the old Nut-shell,
And woe & alack for Pretty Mary Bell!
For the Devil crept in where the Fairy skip'd out,
And there goes Miss Bell with her fusty old Nut. 

– William Blake (ca. 1800-1803)