Penta Springs Canada

Penta Springs Canada

A Digital Assets Management Firm

Visual inspiration, a content collection of over 100 million assets. Photos, Illustrations, Footage, Text, Sound, Music, Maps, Posters, Art, Sky Maps, Books, Ebooks, Articles, Audiobooks and NFTs. We use original research and analysis to market the content Globally and to Media Specialists.

Preserving the world’s stories for future generations.

Penta Springs Canada

Preserving the world’s stories for future generations.

Penta Springs Canada is the archival heart of the Penta Springs global network. Dedicated to the long-term preservation, restoration, and curation of more than 100 million historical and cultural media assets, each item is catalogued, digitized, and enriched with detailed metadata for research, discovery, and access.

Penta Springs LLP visual works at the intersection of heritage and technology—using advanced archival standards, metadata frameworks, and indexing to maintain the integrity and accessibility of the collection. From rare film reels to contemporary documentaries, our role is to safeguard history and make it usable across generations.

Core functions:

Media preservation & digitization

Metadata creation & enrichment

Archival research support

Cultural heritage stewardship

Collection development and curation

Penta Springs Canada enables institutions, creators, and researchers around the world to engage with history through a trusted, preserved, and well-structured archive.

Visualization of our world. A portfolio of over hundred million images and digital assets that spans twenty centuries.

Bochoutt, Godfriedt van, work, Still life, 1661, oil on wood, painting, still life; wine; lemon; oyster; grape; apple, 46.5 cm x 38 cm, peeled lemon, wine glass, red wine, wine berries, oysters, apple. This exquisite still life painting by Godfriedt van Bochoutt, created in 1661, captures a richly detailed tabletop scene with exceptional realism. Executed in oil on wood, the composition features a peeled lemon, a glass of red wine, wine berries (grapes), oysters, and an apple, all carefully arranged to highlight texture, light, and natural form.
The gleaming wine glass and opened oysters suggest both indulgence and ephemerality—a common theme in 17th-century Flemish still life. The peeled lemon, often symbolic of luxury and transience, curls elegantly in the foreground, drawing the viewer’s eye with its intricate detailing. The overall balance of color, light, and form demonstrates Bochoutt’s refined technique and attention to the subtleties of reflective surfaces and organic textures.