and Rachel Pool, born Ruisch" with "aged 84" inscribed above Ruysch's portrait. (Pool was already deceased at the time this picture was made.) Rachel Ruysch was born on 3 June 1664 in
The Hague to the scientist
Frederik Ruysch and Maria Post, the daughter of the architect
Pieter Post. Her father was also a professor of
anatomy and
botany and an amateur painter. At a young age she began to paint the flowers and insects of her father's collection in the popular manner of
Otto Marseus van Schrieck. Working from these samples Rachel matched her father's ability to depict nature with great accuracy. Rachel and her sister Anna Ruysch learned to draw and paint within their father's extensive scientific collections, which provided abundant botanical and zoological specimens for study. Both sisters pursued painting careers, although Anna appears to have stopped painting after her marriage, while Rachel continued professionally for more than six decades. In 1679, at age fifteen, Ruysch was apprenticed to
Willem van Aelst, a prominent flower painter in Amsterdam. His studio in Amsterdam looked out over the studio of the flower painter
Maria van Oosterwijck. Ruysch studied with van Aelst until his death in 1683. Besides painting technique he taught her how to arrange a bouquet in a vase so it would look spontaneous and less formalized. This technique produced a more realistic and three-dimensional effect in her paintings. By the time Ruysch was eighteen she was producing and selling independently signed works. She died in Amsterdam on 12 October 1750, and remains a widely respected artist. ==Works==