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Sedum Minus Arborescens (Tree-like Stonecrop) Plate 130, Folio 469

  • ARTIST: Abraham Munting

  • PUBLISHER: Published in Amsterdam & Leyden.

  • MEDIUM: Engraving,

    DATE: 1702

  • EDITION SIZE: Average paper size 15 1/4 x 10" (388 x 250 mm).

  • DESCRIPTION: Commonly known as the Tree-like Stonecrop, the illustration of Sedum Minus Arborescens (Plate 130) hails from the 1702 edition of Abraham Munting’s Phytographia Curiosa, a work that remains one of the most stylistically eccentric entries in the history of botanical art. Munting, a Dutch physician and botanist who oversaw the botanical garden at Groninge presented his specimens through a surreal, Baroque lens. Here, plants appear as towering giants dwarfing the tiny, idyllic landscapes of ruins, villas, and pastoral hillsides beneath and behind them. This specific plant, a succulent characterized by its "arborescens" or tree-like branching habit and fleshy leaves, is rendered with a heavy emphasis on its structural geometry, reflecting the 18th-century fascination with exotic flora that could survive the journey to European "curiosity" gardens.

  • ADDITIONAL INFO: This piece is in a 11 x 16.5 inch archival mylar for handling.

  • CONDITION: Good condition.

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