Balthasar van der Ast, 'Flowers in a Vase with Shells and Insects', about 1630
About the work
Overview
This painting is a strange fiction: roses and tulips, lilac and snake’s head lilies, aren't all in bloom at the same time, so the artist would have made drawings and sketches of them at different times of the year, later incorporating them into the picture. Scientific exploration and discovery flourished in the Dutch Republic at this time. As in this painting, art and science often went hand in hand. Artists began to use the newly invented microscope to enable them to paint in accurate detail plants and insects – like the butterfly, the cricket and the wasp zooming down to the fallen rose petals.
What van der Ast paints is so realistic that the objects are almost tangible. In one way they are presented as scientific specimens, but in another as an unfading vision of nature that could never have existed in reality.
Key facts
Details
- Full title
- Flowers in a Vase with Shells and Insects
- Artist
- Balthasar van der Ast
- Artist dates
- 1593/94 - 1657
- Date made
- about 1630
- Medium and support
- oil on wood
- Dimensions
- 47 × 36.8 cm
- Inscription summary
- Signed
- Acquisition credit
- Accepted by HM Government in lieu of Inheritance Tax and allocated to the National Gallery, 2003
- Inventory number
- NG6593
- Location
- Room 28
- Collection
- Main Collection
- Frame
- 17th-century Dutch Frame
About this record
If you know more about this painting or have spotted an error, please contact us. Please note that exhibition histories are listed from 2009 onwards. Bibliographies may not be complete; more comprehensive information is available in the National Gallery Library.