Description
This work captures the rhythmic heartbeat of the natural world through the ornate lens of the École de Nancy. Broad, lobed leaves climb upward in a graceful serpentine dance, their translucent veins glowing as if illuminated from within by a fading amber sky. The composition honors the ‘whiplash’ curve, where organic forms are elevated to high ornament, transforming a simple botanical study into a cathedral of light and glass-like textures.
Living with this piece is an invitation to slow time. The soft, diffuse luminosity creates a focal point of warmth that radiates outward, grounding a room in a sense of historical grandeur and quiet contemplation. It is a testament to the enduring beauty of the organic, where the boundary between the garden and the gallery dissolves into a dream of eternal autumn.
Purpose
This piece seeks to evoke the tactile richness of stained glass and ironwork, celebrating the vitality of growth and the spiritual resonance found in nature’s symmetrical patterns.
Interior Decorator’s Advice
- Place this in a room with warm wood accents or brass fixtures to echo its golden undertones
- Position it where it can catch late afternoon sun to enhance the internal ‘stained glass’ glow
- Frame it simply in a dark, slender wood to allow the intricate border to breathe and define the space
Perfect For
- Seekers of the Belle Époque aesthetic and turn-of-the-century elegance
- Collectors who find peace in botanical rhythms and warm, tonal palettes
- Those looking to bring a sense of organic architecture and historical depth to their sanctuary
From the Organic Symphony collection:
Picture a glasshouse winter garden at the turn of the last century, its amber roof glowing at dusk, where one impossible vine writes its whole life across eight vertical panels. Each sheet holds a single moment of that ascent — roots tangled in darkness, tendrils reaching, secret buds swelling, corollas opening like slow music toward an ethereal canopy of light. The line moves in the serpentine curve the Belle Époque called the coup de fouet, the whiplash stroke that once made metal, glass and stone seem to grow, and here it makes a whole imaginary plant breathe.
The palette murmurs rather than shouts: antique parchment and burnished gold, cooled by absinthe green, dusty heliotrope and deep peacock blue. Hung together, the series behaves almost like architecture — vertical rhythms that lift a room and soften its edges, an ornamental hymn to nature. To live with these panels is to keep a private garden that never fades, one that turns any wall into a quiet cathedral of growth and light.
Key Features
- Material: High-definition Lambda Print — true silver-halide photographic exposure (Fuji Crystal DP II for colour, Ilford for black & white) on premium acrylic glass, glossy finish for exceptional depth and clarity.
- Finish: Face-mounted under 2 mm premium acrylic glass — Diasec technique.
- Backing: 3 mm alu Dibond composite panel.
- Style: Art Nouveau
- Edition: Unlimited.
- Mounting: Recessed aluminium subframe — ready to hang (invisible wall mounting, 25 mm offset).
- Longevity: 50–75 years archival conservation.





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