Garden of Eden ☰ Bosch ☷ Canvas

The Garden of Earthly Delights (1510, De tuin der lusten) by Hieronymus Bosch is a religious triptych warning against the perils of temptation. Triptychs from this period were generally read left to right, here the left panel portrays The Garden of Eden and the right panel the Last Judgment. The central panel and main subject, The Garden of Earthly Delights, is either a moral warning, or symbolic of paradise lost. The intricacy of the symbolism has led to a wide range of interpretations over the centuries.

The left panel (sometimes known as the Joining of Adam and Eve) depicts a scene from paradise, the Garden of Eden, and the moment when God presents Eve to Adam. The background reveals exotic animals for the period, including a giraffe, a monkey riding an elephant, and a lion. Birds and winged animals, some realistic, some fantastic, and other amalgams of real and imaginary creatures fill the scene.

The center panel depicts not the biblical paradise shown on the left, but a fantastical paradise teeming with male and female nudes, together with various animals, plants, and fruits. Humans riding horses, donkeys, unicorns, camels, alongside other exotic and fanciful creatures, all partaking in sensory pleasures.

The right panel depicts Hell (The Last Judgment), a world in which humans have succumbed to temptations that led to evil and reap eternal damnation. In a single, densely detailed scene, there are cities on fire, war, torture chambers, infernal caverns, demons and mutated animals feeding on human flesh. Animals punish humans, subjecting them to nightmarish torments that symbolize the seven deadly sins, matching the torment to the sin.

Garden of Eden ☰ Bosch ☷ Art PrintGarden of Eden ☰ Bosch ☷ Canvas
Giclée printed on archival canvas, hand-stretched over solid wood
Dimensions:
With or without a frame?:
Regular price
$100.00
Sale price
$100.00
Regular price
(-30%)
⿴ About Stretched Canvas

Stretched canvas art is created from a giclée print on canvas (instead of paper), and like a traditional painting, the canvas is hand-stretched over a solid wood frame. It can be mounted in a float frame, or displayed on its own. The sides of the canvas are finished in a solid color that complements the artwork, creating a modern masterpiece ready to hang on your wall, without a frame.

⿻ Materials

Giclée printed with eco-solvent inks to resist fading for over 100 years

Canvases are archival-grade, acid-free, satin-finish polycotton fabric

Frames and stretcher bars are solid wood with black backboard and hanging wire installed

⿸ Dimensions

All sizes given are in inches (″)

Sizes offered are to scale with the original work of art

Every effort has been made to scale this artwork without distortion or cropping

Stretched canvases are assembled within a ¼″ tolerance, ex. an 8x12″ canvas's final dimensions will be ~8x12″, on 1.5″ deep stretcher bars

Framed canvases are ~2″ larger, ex. an 8x12″ canvas's final framed dimensions will be ~10x14″ overall

Float frames are ⅝″ wide viewed from the front, and 1⅞″ deep; with a visible gap ("float") between the frame and canvas of ~¼″

Rolled canvases have a 2″ white margin to allow for custom stretching and framing, ex. an 8x12″ print's final dimensions will be 12x16″

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