Insects, Butterflies, and a Dragonfly 17th century Jan van Kessel Flemish Jan van Kessel produced numerous studies of plants and animals and distinguished himself from his predecessors in this field through his emphasis upon the depiction and aesthetic arrangement of insects. The artist likely drew from prints and from life when drawing the array of insects on this sheet. He occasionally painted insects like these on the drawer fronts of the cabinets that insect collectors used for display. The jarring juxtaposition of Van Kessel’s animate painted insects with the dried and pinned specimens co


Insects, Butterflies, and a Dragonfly 17th century Jan van Kessel Flemish Jan van Kessel produced numerous studies of plants and animals and distinguished himself from his predecessors in this field through his emphasis upon the depiction and aesthetic arrangement of insects. The artist likely drew from prints and from life when drawing the array of insects on this sheet. He occasionally painted insects like these on the drawer fronts of the cabinets that insect collectors used for display. The jarring juxtaposition of Van Kessel’s animate painted insects with the dried and pinned specimens contained within the drawers that his depictions decorated would have surprised and delighted those privileged enough to have had access to the elite spaces in which these collections were Insects, Butterflies, and a Dragonfly. Jan van Kessel (Flemish, 1626–1679). 17th century. Black chalk, watercolor and gouache on parchment. Drawings


Size: 3897px × 1791px
Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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