Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Flora

Johann Knapp
Marigolds
ca. 1795-1805
watercolor on paper
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna


Anonymous British Printmaker
Tritoma uvaria
ca. 1857
chromolithograph
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Martin Johnson Heade
Two Hummingbirds above a White Orchid
ca. 1875-90
oil on canvas
Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Texas

Charles Walter Stetson
Magnolia
1895
oil on canvas
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Herbert Wendell Gleason
Gentiana farreri
ca. 1915
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens, Washington DC

Herbert Wendell Gleason
Narcissus triandrus
ca. 1915
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens, Washington DC

Herbert Wendell Gleason
Cypripedium pubescens
ca. 1915
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens, Washington DC

Herbert Wendell Gleason
Lilium superbum
ca. 1915
hand-colored lantern slide
Archives of American Gardens, Washington DC

Georgia O'Keeffe
Yellow Calla
1926
oil on board
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Mary Vaux Walcott
California Lilac
1935
watercolor on paper
Smithsonian American Art Museum,
Washington DC

Mary Vaux Walcott
Fremontodendron
1926
watercolor on paper
Smithsonian American Art Museum,
Washington DC

Jeannette Klute
Pink Lady's Slipper
ca. 1950-60
dye transfer print
Akron Art Museum, Ohio

Jeannette Klute
Larkspur
ca. 1950-60
dye transfer print
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Anonymous Designer
Shopping Bag from Bonwit Teller, New York
ca. 1960
offset-print on paper bag
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Olivia Parker
Rose
1977
gelatin silver print
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Mary Koga
Tulips - Pink #21
1984
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Dorothea Tanning
Convolotus alchemelia (Quiet willow window)
1998
oil on canvas
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

1 September 1945

    The picture was fine because the warm dust-coloured porticoes, dome and pavilions were set against a deep background of sage-green trees and hill.  We sat at the end of the avenue and gazed for some time at this house, perfect of its kind and time.  The old-fashioned architecture books point out disparagingly that it is a slavish copy of one of Palladio's villas, but yesterday it looked quite perfectly eighteenth-century English.  It seemed as if the countryside cried out for it, and after we had left it I felt that everything else seemed unrealized and insipid. 
    At last, after I had said how much I wished I could have it to look after it and live in, we went back to the car.  Eric had found some mushrooms and I had eaten a few autumn blackberries and tasted their mysterious juice, delicious and bitter and sad. 
    We went down the hill and came to some cottages, and across the road were stretched many flags and the legend "Welcome Home Frank."  I thought that it would be nice to be a soldier and find this waiting when one at last came home; but only the people who live in cottages treat their sons in this way. 

– from The Journals of Denton Welch (who was born in 1915, gravely injured in 1935, then wrote the journals between 1942 and his early death in 1948), edited by Michael De-la-Noy (1984)