Flowers and plants Drawing

25 artworks
Spotting on plants  - Subjektiv.art
Spotting on plants
by Margarita Yakymenko
€150 • 56 Ɨ 76 cm
Plants and weed  - Subjektiv.art
Plants and weed
by Margarita Yakymenko
€300 • 56 Ɨ 76 cm
"Memory"  - Subjektiv.art
"Memory"
by Viktoriia Hunina
€380 • 50 Ɨ 70 cm
Gigantica Amazonica #15  - Subjektiv.art
Gigantica Amazonica #15
by Marcelo Moscheta
€15 000 • 125 Ɨ 125 cm
Couleur Majorelle III  - Subjektiv.art
Couleur Majorelle III
by Agnes Tiollier
€900 • 50 Ɨ 70 cm
Black and white  - Subjektiv.art
Black and white
by Samuel isshac
Not Available • 70 Ɨ 50 cm
Diseased plants of soul  - Subjektiv.art
Diseased plants of soul
by Margarita Yakymenko
€150 • 56 Ɨ 76 cm
ā„–21  - Subjektiv.art
ā„–21
by Alona Andreeva
$150 • 30 Ɨ 40 cm
The garden of soul  - Subjektiv.art
The garden of soul
by Margarita Yakymenko
€120 • 56 Ɨ 76 cm
"Bicycle"  - Subjektiv.art
"Bicycle"
by Viktoriia Hunina
€380 • 35 Ɨ 34 cm
Leshy  - Subjektiv.art
Leshy
by Liubov Datchenko
€1 560 • 70 Ɨ 100 cm
My Granny is a flower now  - Subjektiv.art
My Granny is a flower now
by Tamara Safarova
Not Available • 29.7 Ɨ 42 cm
Plants of a soul  - Subjektiv.art
Plants of a soul
by Margarita Yakymenko
€200 • 56 Ɨ 76 cm
"Connection"  - Subjektiv.art
"Connection"
by Viktoriia Hunina
€295 • 17 Ɨ 48 cm
The mushroom watcher  - Subjektiv.art
The mushroom watcher
by Janet Torres
$200 • 20 Ɨ 25 cm
Two violins   - Subjektiv.art
Two violins
by Tamara Safarova
Not Available • 29.7 Ɨ 21 cm
Plants in the shadow  - Subjektiv.art
Plants in the shadow
by Margarita Yakymenko
€160 • 56 Ɨ 76 cm
"In Waiting"  - Subjektiv.art
"In Waiting"
by Viktoriia Hunina
€775 • 50 Ɨ 70 cm
Mallows  - Subjektiv.art
Mallows
by Tamara Safarova
€100 • 10 Ɨ 15 cm
Clinate emergency  - Subjektiv.art
Clinate emergency
by unai anton
€1 250 • 15 Ɨ 60 cm
Escape to harmony and peace  - Subjektiv.art
Escape to harmony and peace
by Lana Korolievskaia
Not Available • 73 Ɨ 51 cm

Original Drawings for Sale | Lines That Outrun Time

Long before alphabets scratched ideas into stone, a hand dipped in pigment traced bison on a cave wall—and the first drawing was born. Forty millennia later, paper, vellum and tablet screens have replaced limestone, yet the urge to translate sight and feeling into marks remains unchanged. A drawing can be brisk as a notation or meditative as a prayer; either way, every stroke is a direct wire from eye to mind to muscle.

From Cave Dust to Cloud Storage

Renaissance anatomists mapped sinew with silverpoint; architects drafted cathedrals in sepia; Expressionists clawed angst across newsprint; today’s illustrators livestream graphite sketches to millions. Technology mutates, but the act—pressure plus surface—stays gloriously simple.

Mediums That Speak Their Own Dialects

  • Graphite: silvery whispers and razor-thin precision.

  • Charcoal: velour darkness capable of erupting into light with one swipe of an eraser.

  • Ink & brush: decisive swoops that forbid second guesses.

  • Pastel & crayon: colour that rubs, blends, then suddenly shouts.

  • Watercolour & gouache washes: translucent mood pooling around crisp contour lines.

Artists often leapfrog media boundaries: a pastel study might later bloom into a mural, while a rapid ball-point sketch could remain the final, perfect statement.

Why Own a Drawing?

  • Intimate scale: ideal for shelves, bedside walls, secret nooks.

  • Process on display: smudges, hatch marks and margin doodles reveal the artist thinking aloud.

  • Collectible range: from pocket-friendly sheets to blue-chip masterworks, paper offers entry points for every budget.

Navigate Subjektiv’s Paper Universe

Swipe through delicate chiaroscuro portraits, Cubist-leaning abstractions and surreal ink reveries. Zoom deep—catch paper fibres, pressure shifts, even the artist’s fingerprint haloed in chalk dust. Choose the piece that keeps replaying behind your eyelids, click Acquire, and track it from studio desk to your door in archival-safe packaging. Changed your mind later? Our resale channel lets the story continue—while fairly rewarding the hand that drew the first line.

Subjektiv.art
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