Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Flora

Georg Flegel
Frankfurter Rose
ca. 1630
watercolor and gouache on paper
Kupferstichkabinett, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin


John La Farge
Wreath of Flowers
1866
oil on canvas
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Gaston Lecreux
Flowers
ca. 1880
oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Reims

Valdemar Schönheyder-Möller
Flowering Evening Primrose
1893
oil on canvas
Skagens Museum, Denmark

Childe Hassam
Giant Magnolias
1904
oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Anonymous German Maker
Tulips
ca. 1905
printed, embossed and die-cut wallpaper border
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

George Lambert
Pan is Dead (Still Life)
1911
oil on canvas
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney

Paul Poiret for Atelier Martine
Bluette
ca. 1912
screenprinted cotton-linen textile
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Georgia O'Keeffe
The White Calico Flower
1931
oil on canvas
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Anonymous American Maker
Magnolias
ca. 1935-45
machine-printed wallpaper
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Hermann Dudley Murphy
Peonies and Deer
1940
oil on canvas
New Britain Museum of American Art, Connecticut

Anonymous American Maker
Rose Sprays
ca. 1948
machine-printed wallpaper
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Anonymous American Maker
Lilac Time
1949
machine-printed wallpaper
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

David Lance Goines
Chez Panisse Twenty-Fifth Anniversary
1996
offset-lithograph (poster)
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC
 
Jean Crane
Endangered Garden II (Peonies)
2005
watercolor on paper
Racine Art Museum, Wisconsin

Hitoshi Ujiie
Branch
2006
digital inkjet print on silk
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Jennifer Dickson
Eucryphia, Milton Lodge
2013
inkjet print
Ottawa Art Gallery, Ontario

18 August 1943

    This morning I went into Tonbridge to get a manuscript typed, and on the way home I saw Prince Belosselsky walking on the pavement.  He was dressed all in a thin flowing suit of some smooth khaki material.  He wore old, beautifully polished brown and white co-respondent shoes and a sort of drooping, rather pointed trilby hat that he always affects.  There was such an extraordinary and studied air of elegance about him that I was quite taken aback, and almost began to wonder if he would care to know me without my coat on and riding a bicycle.  I gave him a quick daring smile and then looked away; but he called out in a loud voice, "Hullo!"  It was a mixture of so many things, but chiefly it was a rather boisterous welcome.  I felt that perhaps he might almost want to stop and talk, but I jumped on to my bicycle after giving one more look at his receding back.  The sweep and sway, the curious lilting and at the same time padding gait, sort of imperial waddle, the feet pointed outwards and the head held stiffly like a wired carnation; the flowing clothes, the jacket very long, the trousers narrow, the soap-stone, rather esquimau face with many wrinkles and hawk eyes, all together held a fascination for me.  Here was somebody not at all clever, rather foolish perhaps, who yet could create this interesting effect.  There was snobbery in every movement and line, but also care, thought, discrimination, idealism and beauty.  Yes, the image left in the mind was beautiful.  I kept thinking as I rode away that that old, poor and probably ill man had made of himself, by endless contriving, a thing of beauty.  It seemed very noble and heroic to me, to be over seventy, exiled, completely alone, with hardly any money, and yet to take this endless care with one's appearance.  I realized at once that it is his only means of expression, but who is to see and who is to care?  That is what seemed sad, that there was nobody to give their attention to this extraordinary relic.  I would like to go to him and ask him questions and write a book about the Russia he remembers. 

26 October 1945

    I walked down to the cinema, and just as I passed it I saw old Prince Belosselsky swaying with his fantastic other century walk up the step.  He too wore a slouch cap and a long coat, with such a dignity and pomposity that they almost might have been crown and robe in Madame Tussaud's.  I have never known anyone with this walk before.  And his stranded figure bit into me too – to think of its sitting wearily through the film alone with its past stretching out behind it like a sheet of never-ending woolly tripe.  To be stifled in one's tripe.

– 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)