
Flower Print The Queen Temple of Flora
Robert Thornton's Temple of Flora, published between 1799 and 1807, represents botanical illustration at its most theatrical. Where most plates of the era prioritised scientific accuracy above all else, Thornton's artists placed their subjects in atmospheric landscape settings — flowers lit dramatically against stormy skies and moonlit gardens. This plate exemplifies that Romantic approach: the bloom rendered with scientific precision yet set within a scene charged with mood, light, and narrative suggestion. It is illustration that insists flowers are not merely specimens but subjects worthy of full pictorial treatment.
Printed on canvas, the illustration's dramatic contrasts and warm background tones come fully alive. The textured surface gives the scene depth and weight — a floral canvas print with genuine presence on the wall.
Original: $38.34
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Flower Print The Queen Temple of Flora
Robert Thornton's Temple of Flora, published between 1799 and 1807, represents botanical illustration at its most theatrical. Where most plates of the era prioritised scientific accuracy above all else, Thornton's artists placed their subjects in atmospheric landscape settings — flowers lit dramatically against stormy skies and moonlit gardens. This plate exemplifies that Romantic approach: the bloom rendered with scientific precision yet set within a scene charged with mood, light, and narrative suggestion. It is illustration that insists flowers are not merely specimens but subjects worthy of full pictorial treatment.
Printed on canvas, the illustration's dramatic contrasts and warm background tones come fully alive. The textured surface gives the scene depth and weight — a floral canvas print with genuine presence on the wall.
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Description
Robert Thornton's Temple of Flora, published between 1799 and 1807, represents botanical illustration at its most theatrical. Where most plates of the era prioritised scientific accuracy above all else, Thornton's artists placed their subjects in atmospheric landscape settings — flowers lit dramatically against stormy skies and moonlit gardens. This plate exemplifies that Romantic approach: the bloom rendered with scientific precision yet set within a scene charged with mood, light, and narrative suggestion. It is illustration that insists flowers are not merely specimens but subjects worthy of full pictorial treatment.
Printed on canvas, the illustration's dramatic contrasts and warm background tones come fully alive. The textured surface gives the scene depth and weight — a floral canvas print with genuine presence on the wall.























