Artwork Page for Persian Flowers

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Persian Flowers

1755
(French, 1728–1808)
Public Domain
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Did You Know?

The artist Jean Baptiste Pillement was employed by Marie Antoinette to create decorations for her legendary retreat, the Petit Trianon, at Versailles.

Description

Jean Baptiste Pillement was one of the most influential designers of the Rococo period, known for his varied and prolific chinoiseries (European variants of Chinese and Japanese motifs). His designs were spread throughout Europe primarily via their translation into prints. This print is one of a set of six etched by Pillement himself. Each depicts a so-called “Persian” flower, largely fantasies, presenting strange, alienlike floral forms that could be adapted to various uses from textiles to wall decorations.
A series of six vertical etchings, arranged in two rows of three, features dark ink on cream paper depicting stylized botanical specimens. Centered compositions display plants with patterned flowers, hanging pods, and fine root systems. In the top-left print, a block of text rests near the stem's base. Fine, textured linework defines each organic form, which is framed by a rectangular plate mark against a plain background.

Persian Flowers

1755

Jean Baptiste Pillement

(French, 1728–1808)
France, 18th century

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