

Babberger painted Flowers by the Stream in 1922, by which point he was spending regular summers on the Klausen Pass in the Swiss Alps and his work had fully committed to Expressionism. A birch tree trunk runs up the center of the composition, flanked on both sides by dense wildflowers — deep blue delphiniums, yellow daisies, pink clover, white anemones — painted in flat, bold strokes against a saturated green ground. The painting fills every inch of the surface with color and form, leaving no negative space. Babberger was close friends with Augusto Giacometti, Giovanni's uncle, whom he'd met while studying in Florence, and both painters shared an interest in the decorative potential of color.

See Also

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Untitled Sketch
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Vétheuil
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Nu renversé à la draperie
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La chambre à Nice
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Atelier au torse
Raoul Dufy

Still Life
Edvard Weie

Vernet (Provençal Landscape)
James Dickson Innes

Arenig Fawr, North Wales
James Dickson Innes

Evening, Sun Setting behind Arenig Fach
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Still Life of Fruit and a Bronze Statue
Henri Matisse

Red Interior, Still Life on a Blue Table
Henri Matisse

The Birth of Eve
Maurice Denis

Physallis, vase bleu et pommes
Louis Valtat

Seated Female Nude
William H. Johnson

Portrait
William H. Johnson

Portrait of a Woman in a Rocking Chair
William H. Johnson

Le Champ d'avoine
Raoul Dufy

Le Bouquet d'arums
Raoul Dufy

Der Schauspieler
Jankel Adler

Abstract Composition
Jankel Adler

Komposition (1925–1930)
Adolf Hölzel

Coquelicots et fleurs blanches
Louis Valtat

L'Atelier Rouge
Henri Matisse

Bouquet de Tulipes
Suzanne Valadon

Überbrückung
Paul Klee

Variation
Alexej von Jawlensky

The Island Garden
Childe Hassam

Movement of Vaulted Chambers
Paul Klee

Farbstudien, 10 Blätter VIII
Karl Wiener

Still Life with Roses and Lemons
Józef Pankiewicz

Nu à la Fenêtre
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Landscape at Collioure
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Organ Chord
Marek Włodarski

Untitled (Textile Design No. VI)
Frances Hodgkins

Solva (Fishing Village in Pembrokeshire)
Frances Hodgkins

Grüne Frau mit gelbem Hut I
Hermann Stenner

Heuschrecken (Komposition)
Christian Rohlfs

Sonnenblumen
Christian Rohlfs

Tulpen
Christian Rohlfs

Westfälische Landschaft
Christian Rohlfs

Vier Akte unter Bäumen
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

Varietéparade
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

Two Nudes in a Room
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

Nacktes Mädchen auf Diwan
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

Blumen
August Babberger

Meadows
Childe Hassam

Wild Flowers
John Henry Twachtman

L'oiseau (paon)
André Derain

Le chemin à la campagne en Bretagne
Édouard Vuillard

The Petunia
Édouard Vuillard

The Umbrian Mountains
Arthur B. Davies

Dew Drops
Arthur B. Davies

The Little Cottage
George Clausen

Landscape with Birches
Paula Modersohn-Becker

Summer Morning
Otto Modersohn

Autumn in the Mountains
Adrian Scott Stokes

Raigardas (III)
Mikalojus Čiurlionis

Landschaft bei Savièse
Ernest Biéler

Landscape of the Ile-de-France
Édouard Vuillard

The Trundle at Goodwood
C.R.W. Nevinson

Rolling Country (The Downs below Goodwood)
C.R.W. Nevinson

White Farm
Gustave De Smet

Storm
Eugène Laermans

Village Church
Eugène Laermans

Coquelicots et fleurs blanches
Louis Valtat

On the Heights
Arthur B. Davies

Landscape with Cows
Arthur B. Davies

Harvest Moon
George Inness

A Silver Morning
George Inness

The Island Garden
Childe Hassam

Moonrise
Maria Yakunchikova

The Last Rays
Jean-Charles Cazin

After the Harvest
Jean-Charles Cazin

Moonrise
Jean-Charles Cazin

Das Landgut von Saulce
Henri-Joseph Harpignies

Approaching Storm
Louis Michel Eilshemius

Farm in Konary (1900)
Stanisław Wyspiański

White Cow
Paul Sérusier

Breton Panel with Cows
Paul Sérusier

Solva (Fishing Village in Pembrokeshire)
Frances Hodgkins

Hahn und Huhn
Christian Rohlfs

Blumen
August Babberger

Meadows
Childe Hassam

Le soir sur l’étang
Alphonse Osbert

Cottage in the garden in Przełęk (1909)
Zdzisław Jasiński

Rye Sheaves in the Field
Zdzisław Jasiński

Fields of Diélette
Alphonse Osbert

Landschaft aus Schleswig-Holstein
Gustav Kampmann

Park at Włochy near Krakow
Ferdynand Ruszczyc
Our Process
Every piece in the archive goes through a deliberate process — part historian, part designer, part obsessive.
The thrill of the hunt
We pull from institutional archives, digitized collections, and the deep corners of the art world to find pieces that are both culturally and visually relevent, yet underexplored. We skip the hyper trendy pieces (looking at you, Matisse cutouts) in favor of niche work with a good story.
Context is everything
We dig into the provenance, history, and context around each piece — the artist, the period, the story that makes it worth living with. You don't have to be an art historian to appreciate knowing the who/what/why of a work of art, and it makes it that much more satisfying to live with every day.
Where a scan becomes a print
Institutional scans are often remarkable, but they're also imperfect: color casts from old photography, dust and scratches from the scanning bed, compression artifacts, uneven lighting across a large canvas. What we don't touch is the painting itself — the craquelure, the patina, the brushwork, the small marks of time that make a 200-year-old work look 200 years old. We restore the photograph of the painting, not the painting.
A careful eye
Color is adjusted with restraint. We reference historical materials when possible and avoid over-saturation or heavy-handed edits. The aim is a result that feels balanced, natural, and consistent with how the work was intended to be seen.
We don't do guesswork
Each piece is reviewed at print size to ensure clarity, contrast, and overall quality. Small issues become obvious at scale, so we take the time to catch them before anything is produced.

Common Questions
Giclée (zhee-clay) is a fine art printing process using archival pigment inks on museum-quality paper. The colors are richer, the detail is sharper, and the prints are rated to last 100+ years without fading. It's the same method used by galleries and museums for exhibition-quality reproductions.
All unframed prints are produced on heavyweight, acid-free fine art paper with a subtle matte finish.
Check the size guide on the Print + Frame guide page — it shows all available sizes to scale. General rule: go bigger than you think. For above a sofa, you want the art to be about two-thirds the width of the furniture below it.
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Our preview tool above gives a general sense of how the piece will look at different sizes, but it crops from the center and may not reflect the final composition exactly. If you’d like to confirm how a specific size will be cropped, feel free to reach out—we’re happy to help.
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