"L'Animal dans la décoration" 1897
Papillons et pavots, veilleuse émaux translucides.
Paons, vase émaux cloisonnés. Oiseaux, tenture.
E. Hutre - Architectural design for a wall decoration c.1900
Eglantines, peacock, cranes, and bees. Pen and black, blue, and metallic ink,
watercolor, over graphite, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC.
“A Palace Complex with Harem Gardens” India, Faizabad or Lucknow, c. 1765
The miniature, whose primary motif is a fantastic palace complex populated by a prince’s concubines along with their female servants and guards, in a way depicts the world as one great garden. In the distance we see the prince on the back of an elephant, and on the other side of the river all manner of activities are taking place that form a powerful contrast to the perhaps pleasant but enforced idleness of the women of the harem.
"Four Women in a Palace Garden" India, Bundi, mid-18th Century
This exotic and atmospheric miniature from Bundi simply radiates the heat of a tropical night. The garden’s vegetation, especially the lush trees, could have inspired the French naivist Henri Rousseau. The four women stand like gaily adorned flowers, enjoying the evening while they await the master of the house, who seems to be symbolized by the peacock with tail spread out. Sounds in the background are the crackling of the “Roman candles,” the quacking of the ducks, and the distant creaking of the waterwheel.
Jessie Arms Botke "Wisteria"
Jessie Hazel Arms Botke (1883-1971) est une artiste américaine connue pour ses peintures d'oiseaux.
Jessie Hazel Arms Botke (1883-1971) was an Illinois and California painter noted for her bird images and use of gold leaf highlights.
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