
The Dream by Rousseau Art Print
Henri Rousseau's The Dream places a reclining nude on a sofa in the middle of a dense, imagined jungle — an impossible scene rendered with total conviction. Oversized lotus flowers, watchful predators, and moonlit foliage crowd every inch of the composition, yet the effect is not chaotic but hypnotic. Rousseau built this world from observation at the Jardin des Plantes and from illustrated magazines, synthesising them into something entirely his own. The flat perspective and luminous greens give the painting a stained-glass intensity, while the scale of the canvas allows every leaf to be individually articulated.
On canvas, Rousseau's saturated greens and layered foliage take on a rich, dimensional warmth — a canvas print where the textured surface deepens the dreamlike atmosphere of the original.
Original: $44.15
-65%$44.15
$15.45More Images






The Dream by Rousseau Art Print
Henri Rousseau's The Dream places a reclining nude on a sofa in the middle of a dense, imagined jungle — an impossible scene rendered with total conviction. Oversized lotus flowers, watchful predators, and moonlit foliage crowd every inch of the composition, yet the effect is not chaotic but hypnotic. Rousseau built this world from observation at the Jardin des Plantes and from illustrated magazines, synthesising them into something entirely his own. The flat perspective and luminous greens give the painting a stained-glass intensity, while the scale of the canvas allows every leaf to be individually articulated.
On canvas, Rousseau's saturated greens and layered foliage take on a rich, dimensional warmth — a canvas print where the textured surface deepens the dreamlike atmosphere of the original.
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Description
Henri Rousseau's The Dream places a reclining nude on a sofa in the middle of a dense, imagined jungle — an impossible scene rendered with total conviction. Oversized lotus flowers, watchful predators, and moonlit foliage crowd every inch of the composition, yet the effect is not chaotic but hypnotic. Rousseau built this world from observation at the Jardin des Plantes and from illustrated magazines, synthesising them into something entirely his own. The flat perspective and luminous greens give the painting a stained-glass intensity, while the scale of the canvas allows every leaf to be individually articulated.
On canvas, Rousseau's saturated greens and layered foliage take on a rich, dimensional warmth — a canvas print where the textured surface deepens the dreamlike atmosphere of the original.























