Rachel Ruysch turned flowers into some of the most refined still lifes of the Dutch Golden Age. As the daughter of a famous botanist and anatomist, her childhood was spent surrounded by preserved specimens. This scientific upbringing gave her a precise understanding of nature and helped her break into a male-dominated art world, where she achieved immense international success.
Her meticulous canvases rejected stiff, symmetrical layouts in favor of asymmetrical, curving compositions. She built high-contrast spectacles by plunging vibrant blossoms into sharp shafts of light against pitch-black backdrops. She spent months rendering exotic tulips, heavy peonies, and wilting leaves. She hid tiny insects and dewdrops among petals to remind viewers of the fleeting nature of life.
A court painter in Düsseldorf, Ruysch continued painting into her eighties. Today, she is celebrated as a pioneering woman who brought scientific precision to the peak of dramatic Baroque expression.