Untitled N150 (2018) Bas Meeuws (b. 1974, Netherlands)
todays bird
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@love-for-carnation
Untitled N150 (2018) Bas Meeuws (b. 1974, Netherlands)
Briggs folder for embroidery silks with hand embroidered cover of pink carnations
Jar of Red Carnations Barbara Courtney Jaenicke (USA)
Bio: https://www.barbarajaenicke.com/about Other artworks: https://www.barbarajaenicke.com/works
Bizarre St. Germain, 1743 Georg Dionysius Ehret (1708–1770, German)
Madonna Mit Dem Jesuskind Und Dem Johannesknaben - detail Jörg Breu (1475/80 – 1537, German)
Ritratto di Fanciulla con garofano Maestro del secolo XIX
Alexandre Benois di Stetto (1896–1979)
Dianthus caryophyllus Hans-Simon Holtzbecker (1610–1671, German)
Carnations. 1986. Lyudmila Polstovalova (1929-1993, Russian)
Graphic artist and illustrator. Member of the Union of Artists of the USSR. Born in Sarapul. Worked as a book artist, lived in Sverdlovsk-Yekaterinburg. Graduated from the Sverdlovsk Art School in 1950. From the 1950s to the 1980s, she collaborated with the magazine "Ural Sledopyt" and the Sredne-Uralsky Book Publishing House. The works are housed in art museums in Yekaterinburg, Perm, Nizhny Tagil, and Sarapul.
The Unicorn in Captivity (from the Unicorn Tapestries) (detail), 1495-1505. South Netherlandish. The red-flowered plant that appears to the left of the blue iris, just outside the Unicorn’s enclosure, is a carnation, a doubled garden form of the clove pink.
Still life with fruit and carnations Alfred Hirv (1880-1918, Estonian born - Russian)
Detail from The Hunters Enter the Woods (from the Unicorn Tapestries), 1495-1505. South Netherlandish
Flowers in a Glass Vase, 1667 Jacob van Walscapelle (1644-1727, Dutch)
Original French Vintage Postcard c.1912
Winter morning. Still life with carnations. (2022) Anna Pavlovich-Naneva (Russian)
Anna studied painting in the art studio in Zelenograd creative house, in art school №9, Moscow and with a tutor-artist Yakovleva Olga 4 years. Anna graduated from the Institute of International Economic Relations and The Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation. Anna's creative philosophy is pure emotions clothed in creativity. The stories that i show through the prism of sensations and emotions remain in my artworks. "According to relatives and friends, a positive attitude in canvases helps to create good mood, kind smiles, brings joy and kindness, and many associate their successes in personal life and business with the light of kindness, and joy that comes from my pictures" says Anna. The works of the artist have found their admirers in Bulgaria,Italy, Portugal, Spain, China and in Russia https://www.saatchiart.com/en-de/account/artworks/1692277
Vintage enamel carnation flower brooch pin, from the 1960s
Claveles Antonia Ferreras Bertrán (1873-1953, Spanish)
Antònia Ferreras was a Catalan painter and illustrator. Known for her flower paintings, she was distinguished by her sensitive and profound use of color. Trained at the Barcelona School of Fine Arts, she was a flower painter. She painted using different techniques such as oil and watercolor, and experimented with all kinds of formats, sometimes landscape. She also painted on satin. During the first decades of the 20th century and until the beginning of the Civil War, she participated in many exhibitions both group and solo. As an illustrator, she contributed to Barcelona magazines and also created postcards for the Viennese company Nodomanski. Apart from her artistic career, she served as president of the Amparo Maternal charity (1930) and of the school of social assistance for women. Ferreras's work is preserved in the National Art Museum of Catalonia, the Prado Museum and some other museums.