✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
HomeStore

Elegant Dark Floral Bouquet Glass Wall Art

Elegant Dark Floral Bouquet Glass Wall Art

A Dutch-Golden-Age tulip still-life stands in vertical cinematic format — a parrot-tulip arrangement of crimson-and-ivory tulips, marigold daffodils, scarlet poppies and powder-blue columbines bursts from a dark vase on a stone ledge, with a fallen white rose, scarlet primulas and a black caterpillar resting at the foreground.

The composition reads as Bosschaert-school memento-mori: the curling parrot-tulip rears tall like a flame, the bouquet anchors centrally with deep emerald foliage, and the scattered flowers and crawling caterpillar speak quietly to fleeting beauty. The piece sits between Ambrosius-Bosschaert and Balthasar-van-der-Ast 17th-century floral painting.

Tempered glass deepens the obsidian ground and pushes the crimson tulips and ivory rose into reflective Old-Master luminance that paper print cannot match. Hung in a heritage dining room, a luxury restaurant entry, a private library or a designer foyer, this Dutch tulip still-life cinematography brings Old-Master grandeur and memento-mori sophistication into a residential wall.

Select Size
From $55.96

Original: $159.90

-65%
Elegant Dark Floral Bouquet Glass Wall Art

$159.90

$55.96
Product image 1
Product image 2
Product image 3
Product image 4
Product image 5
Product image 6
Product image 7
Product image 8
Product image 9

Description

A Dutch-Golden-Age tulip still-life stands in vertical cinematic format — a parrot-tulip arrangement of crimson-and-ivory tulips, marigold daffodils, scarlet poppies and powder-blue columbines bursts from a dark vase on a stone ledge, with a fallen white rose, scarlet primulas and a black caterpillar resting at the foreground.

The composition reads as Bosschaert-school memento-mori: the curling parrot-tulip rears tall like a flame, the bouquet anchors centrally with deep emerald foliage, and the scattered flowers and crawling caterpillar speak quietly to fleeting beauty. The piece sits between Ambrosius-Bosschaert and Balthasar-van-der-Ast 17th-century floral painting.

Tempered glass deepens the obsidian ground and pushes the crimson tulips and ivory rose into reflective Old-Master luminance that paper print cannot match. Hung in a heritage dining room, a luxury restaurant entry, a private library or a designer foyer, this Dutch tulip still-life cinematography brings Old-Master grandeur and memento-mori sophistication into a residential wall.