Peach Tree Branch
by Megata Morikaga
Painted during the Meiji era, this work captures peach blossoms at their most fleeting: buds still sealed, petals just opened, branches alive with the tension between stillness and bloom.
In Japanese culture, the peach tree (momo) carries layered meaning beyond its beauty. Unlike sakura, which became a symbol of fleeting life and collective emotion, the peach has older, quieter roots: associated with longevity, protection, and the turning of seasons in classical poetry and folk tradition. Morikaga renders it with that same restraint, letting the soft pink petals and deep crimson stamens speak without sentimentality.
The pale grey-blue ground gives the composition its breath, preventing it from becoming decorative, keeping it art.
This is a faithful reproduction as a giclée print, printed on museum-grade, archival fine art paper for lasting vibrancy and detail.
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Peach Tree Branch
Peach Tree Branch
by Megata Morikaga
Painted during the Meiji era, this work captures peach blossoms at their most fleeting: buds still sealed, petals just opened, branches alive with the tension between stillness and bloom.
In Japanese culture, the peach tree (momo) carries layered meaning beyond its beauty. Unlike sakura, which became a symbol of fleeting life and collective emotion, the peach has older, quieter roots: associated with longevity, protection, and the turning of seasons in classical poetry and folk tradition. Morikaga renders it with that same restraint, letting the soft pink petals and deep crimson stamens speak without sentimentality.
The pale grey-blue ground gives the composition its breath, preventing it from becoming decorative, keeping it art.
This is a faithful reproduction as a giclée print, printed on museum-grade, archival fine art paper for lasting vibrancy and detail.
Original: $35.10
-70%$35.10
$10.53Product Information
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Description
by Megata Morikaga
Painted during the Meiji era, this work captures peach blossoms at their most fleeting: buds still sealed, petals just opened, branches alive with the tension between stillness and bloom.
In Japanese culture, the peach tree (momo) carries layered meaning beyond its beauty. Unlike sakura, which became a symbol of fleeting life and collective emotion, the peach has older, quieter roots: associated with longevity, protection, and the turning of seasons in classical poetry and folk tradition. Morikaga renders it with that same restraint, letting the soft pink petals and deep crimson stamens speak without sentimentality.
The pale grey-blue ground gives the composition its breath, preventing it from becoming decorative, keeping it art.
This is a faithful reproduction as a giclée print, printed on museum-grade, archival fine art paper for lasting vibrancy and detail.
























