
Leaves from Nature Nr 1 by Owen Jones
Owen Jones's "Leaves from Nature" series, published in 1857, translates botanical form into pure ornamental principle. Plate Nr 1 arranges stylised leaves in rhythmic symmetry — flattened, formalised, and rendered in the bold chromolithographic palette that defined Jones's design philosophy. Influenced by Islamic geometric ornament and Japanese compositional logic, the work stands at the intersection of natural observation and decorative abstraction. It remains one of the foundational documents of Victorian design reform.
Reproduced as an archival fine art print, Jones's saturated colour fields, precise outlines, and graphic clarity are captured with exceptional fidelity on fine art paper — the chromolithographic richness of the original rendered with sharpness and depth.
Owen Jones's "Leaves from Nature" series, published in 1857, translates botanical form into pure ornamental principle. Plate Nr 1 arranges stylised leaves in rhythmic symmetry — flattened, formalised, and rendered in the bold chromolithographic palette that defined Jones's design philosophy. Influenced by Islamic geometric ornament and Japanese compositional logic, the work stands at the intersection of natural observation and decorative abstraction. It remains one of the foundational documents of Victorian design reform.
Reproduced as an archival fine art print, Jones's saturated colour fields, precise outlines, and graphic clarity are captured with exceptional fidelity on fine art paper — the chromolithographic richness of the original rendered with sharpness and depth.
Original: $20.93
-65%$20.93
$7.33Description
Owen Jones's "Leaves from Nature" series, published in 1857, translates botanical form into pure ornamental principle. Plate Nr 1 arranges stylised leaves in rhythmic symmetry — flattened, formalised, and rendered in the bold chromolithographic palette that defined Jones's design philosophy. Influenced by Islamic geometric ornament and Japanese compositional logic, the work stands at the intersection of natural observation and decorative abstraction. It remains one of the foundational documents of Victorian design reform.
Reproduced as an archival fine art print, Jones's saturated colour fields, precise outlines, and graphic clarity are captured with exceptional fidelity on fine art paper — the chromolithographic richness of the original rendered with sharpness and depth.























