Born in 1664, Dutch artist Rachel Ruysch earned acclaim for her stunning still-life compositions—lush, delicate arrangements of flowers, insects, and exotic botanicals rendered with precision and alive with movement. The exhibition at The Museum of Fine Arts brings together 35 paintings sourced from museums and private collections across Europe and the United States, alongside rare botanical and entomological specimens and works by contemporary female artists of Ruysch’s era.
What makes this exhibition especially compelling—and appropriate for visitors who appreciate artistry and depth—is the way it bridges art and science. Ruysch, working in an era when women’s creative contributions were often overlooked, engaged not merely in decoration but in what the curators describe as a “deep understanding of the natural world.” Her canvases tease out narratives of growth and decay, of beauty and transience, inviting reflection on the very nature of observation.
For guests of Clarendon Square Inn, a stay in the South End gives you just steps away access to this refined cultural moment. We see the value in juxtaposing an evening of quiet luxury at our hotel with a daytime of visual inspiration at the MFA galleries—where you might pause before a large floral still-life, sip in the hushed atmosphere of Georgian-era botanical discovery, and appreciate the hush of time captured on canvas.
Given that the exhibition closes December 7, 2025, we encourage guests to seize the moment. It is an ideal pairing—Bostonians call it “the art of leisure,” and we invite you to experience it. Click the link for more information regarding the final days of the Rachel Ruysch MFA Exhibition.

