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FLORAL STILL LIFE PAINTINGS

Image on left: Still Life with Flowers by Ambrosius Bosschaert (1617)

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​​​​​What would you consider today’s most coveted status symbols? A Mercedes or a Ferrari, a diamond Rolex or a designer handbag? A European villa? In Rachel Ruysch’s day it was a simple tulip. Looking at her floral still life paintings can reveal an entire hidden world—of wealth, status, even the economics of the world’s first financial crises.

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Flowers: A national passion

Ruysch’s career paralleled the growth of the Dutch horticultural industry and the science of botany. The Netherlands became the largest importers of new and exotic plants and flowers from around the world. Once valued primarily for their use as herbs or medicine, flowers became newly appreciated simply for their beauty and fragrance. They became prized luxuries and desirable status symbols for the wealthy. Botanists and gardeners sought the rarest specimens imported from overseas trade. The tulip, like the one featured prominently in Ruysch’s painting below, was the most exotic.

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​https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DicWYa5b7x8

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Created for the use of Milpitas High School Students. Proudly created with Wix.com ©2019 I apologize if I cited your site wrong.

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