
Hexacoralla I by Ernst Haeckel
Hexacoralla I is drawn from Haeckel's monumental Kunstformen der Natur series, published in 1904. The plate presents a dense, radially symmetrical arrangement of coral organisms rendered with the exactitude of scientific documentation and the aesthetic control of a practiced draftsman. Pale tentacles and skeletal structures are mapped against a stark background, each specimen positioned to reveal its underlying geometry. The result hovers between natural history atlas and decorative art — a composition that rewards close inspection with its intricacy and compels from a distance through its formal order.
This archival fine art print preserves the fine engraved linework and delicate stippling of Haeckel's original plates. Printed in our Berlin studio, every hair-thin detail reads cleanly against the matte surface — exactly what this level of scientific illustration demands.
Hexacoralla I is drawn from Haeckel's monumental Kunstformen der Natur series, published in 1904. The plate presents a dense, radially symmetrical arrangement of coral organisms rendered with the exactitude of scientific documentation and the aesthetic control of a practiced draftsman. Pale tentacles and skeletal structures are mapped against a stark background, each specimen positioned to reveal its underlying geometry. The result hovers between natural history atlas and decorative art — a composition that rewards close inspection with its intricacy and compels from a distance through its formal order.
This archival fine art print preserves the fine engraved linework and delicate stippling of Haeckel's original plates. Printed in our Berlin studio, every hair-thin detail reads cleanly against the matte surface — exactly what this level of scientific illustration demands.
Original: $17.65
-65%$17.65
$6.18Description
Hexacoralla I is drawn from Haeckel's monumental Kunstformen der Natur series, published in 1904. The plate presents a dense, radially symmetrical arrangement of coral organisms rendered with the exactitude of scientific documentation and the aesthetic control of a practiced draftsman. Pale tentacles and skeletal structures are mapped against a stark background, each specimen positioned to reveal its underlying geometry. The result hovers between natural history atlas and decorative art — a composition that rewards close inspection with its intricacy and compels from a distance through its formal order.
This archival fine art print preserves the fine engraved linework and delicate stippling of Haeckel's original plates. Printed in our Berlin studio, every hair-thin detail reads cleanly against the matte surface — exactly what this level of scientific illustration demands.























