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The Nodding Renealmia

Series TitleThe Temple of Flora
Artist James Caldwall (English, 1739 - 1819)
Publisher Dr. Robert John Thornton (English, ca. 1768 - 1837)
Date1801
MediumAquatint with stipple and line engraving
DimensionsPlate: 20 1/4 × 15 inches (51.44 × 38.1 cm)
Sheet: 23 7/8 × 18 3/4 inches (60.63 × 47.63 cm)
Credit LineGift of Herman R. Sutherland
Object numberF87-5/13
On View
On view
Gallery Location
  • 130
Collections
Exhibition History
Monet's Garden and the Secret Language of Flowers, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, April 5, 2025-April 19, 2026, no cat.
Gallery Label

Flowers have long symbolized strength and resilience, reflecting their unique characteristics and histories. The night-blooming cereus, which blossoms under the moon, embodies renewal and the cyclical nature of life. Shell ginger, or Renealmia, symbolizes protection, vitality, and spiritual awakening, underscoring perseverance and inner peace.

Though beautiful, the rhododendron carries a warning—its toxicity symbolizes adversity and weariness. Similarly, the poisonous dragon arum, with its striking appearance and pungent scent, represents resilience and individuality. Historically valued in the Mediterranean for its medicinal purposes, it reveals the complex interplay of strength, healing, and danger.

Monet’s practice offered resilience in its own way—an escape through art when surrounded by the destruction of World War I, and his garden at Giverny became a sanctuary amid war and loss. “Yesterday,” he wrote, “I resumed work, it’s the best way to avoid thinking of these sad times.”

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Oblique-leaved Begonia
James Caldwall
1800
F87-5/15
A Group of Carnations
James Caldwall
1803
F87-5/7
The Blue Passion Flower
James Caldwall
1800
F87-5/17
The Indian Reed
James Caldwall
1804
F87-5/29
The Narrow-Leaved Kalmia
James Caldwall
1804
F87-5/27
A Group of Auriculas
James Hopwood Sr.
1803
F87-5/8
The Quadrangular Passion Flower
James Hopwood Sr.
1802
F87-5/19
The China Limodoron
John Landseer
1802
F87-5/28
The Queen
Richard Cooper II
1804
F87-5/11
The Maggot-Bearing Stapelia
Joseph Constantine Stadler
1801
F87-5/23
Hyacinths
Thomas Warner
1801
F87-5/5
Persian Cyclamen
William Elmes
1804
F87-5/4