Bridge Over the Sea Rose Pond By Monet
Red Water Lilies By Monet
Sea Roses By Monet
Garden at Arles By Van Gogh
Under the Jacaranda - Godfrey Rivers 1903
Waterlillies By Monet
Park of Romance, Black and White
Blue Water Lilies By Monet
Winter Forest Pond (Long)
Woman with a Parasol By Renoir
Water Lilies No. 7 By Claude Monet
Green Water Lilies By Monet
Celia Thaxter’s Garden by Childe Hassam
White and Purple Water Lilies By Monet
Woman in a Garden By Monet
Park of Romance
Magnolia Garden Bridge
Butterfly Garden (square)
The Water Lily Pond By Monet
Waterlily Pond by Monet
Park of Romance (long)
Girl of the Flower Garden By Kiyo Murakami
Droplet on Lily Pond (long)
Pondering Patches II
Winter Forest Pond, Black and White (Long)
Blossom Parade
Lotus Dream
Lily Pads
Our hand-selected collection of canvas art celebrates the beauty of nature and your own backyard. Prints of gardens and ponds in different seasons and locations capture the tranquil, homely vibe. Piece by piece, you can create a gallery wall around your room, or add a few to decorate your walls above beds, couches, or anywhere else that could use a dose of rustic charm.
Symbolism of Gardens and Ponds
Gardens are locations of peace. They are associated with happiness, salvation, and purity, best exemplified in the Garden of Eden. Spending time in a garden can have positive emotions on us.
From Garden to Kitchen
Have all the colours of the rainbow grown in your garden fill your bellies in the kitchen! The meaning of “garden to table” takes the vegetables you have lovingly grown in your garden and sees this produce on the kitchen table. The idea comes from “farm to table” where local restaurants and café use produce grown on a local farm. The food grown in our farms and gardens is fresher as it doesn’t sit in a freezer as it's being shipped over. You don’t have to have a restaurant to enjoy this idea. Food grown in the garden can be easily brought over to the kitchen.
Gardens in Art
In art history, Claude Monet is the artist probably best associated with gardens. His garden in Giverny has been immortalised in his artworks over 250 times in his Water Lilies series. The Monet family settled in Giverny in 1883. Ten years later, Monet expanded the property by buying neighbouring land. This land crossed a small brook. With this, Monet began to dig a small pond. Here, the famous Japanese bridge can be found. Even as his eyesight began failing, Monet was determined to capture the beauty of his garden, finding it gave him peace.