Irises art print
Irises Art Print for Color Without the Flower-Shop Fuss

Purple has never been very good at slipping into a room unnoticed. John Baker does not ask it to try.
His Irises print is an 11 x 14 floral piece with a direct reason behind it: John likes purple, and he remains a fan of Prince. That is enough explanation to get the painting started. Nobody had to produce a twelve-page statement about the emotional responsibilities of a petal.
The flower is familiar. The color does the talking.
Irises are an easy subject to recognize, which leaves the print free to have some personality. The purple gives it presence without making the image difficult to live with. It can wake up a smaller wall, sit near a desk, or join a group of pieces without disappearing between the frames.
The 11 x 14 size matters here. This is not a print that needs the entire side of a staircase and a lighting consultant. It has enough color to hold attention in a compact space. If the rest of the room has been behaving itself, Irises can be the one thing that knows the guitar solo is coming.
Floral art does not have to be delicate
There is a habit of treating flower pictures as the polite relatives of the art world. They arrive on time, compliment the curtains, and never bring up anything difficult at dinner. John’s Irises has better things to do.
It is still floral art. It can still bring color and life into a room. It just does not have to fade into the background to prove it belongs there. For buyers who like recognizable subjects but do not want the artwork to whisper, purple is making a fairly convincing case.