Natureza Morta Dálias, Uvas e Pêssegos (Nature Morte Dahlias, Raisins et Pêches) - Henri Fantin-Latour
Coleção privada
OST - 51x48 - 1868
Best known as a painter of still-lifes, Fantin-Latour never
tired of depicting flowers and fruits in endless variations. In the present
work he combined a bouquet of colourful dahlias in a green vase with a bunch of
grapes and peaches, arranged on a table top. The precision with which he
depicted his subject, paying attention to the texture and various colours of
individual flowers and fruits, displays Fantin-Latour’s virtuosity in capturing
their ephemeral and fleeting beauty. This technique, which allows the artist to
render differences in surface quality of various elements within the
traditional genre of still-life, owes much to the Old Masters whose paintings
he studied at the Louvre, particularly those by the eighteenth-century master
Chardin. Unlike his friends from the Impressionist circle, Fantin-Latour rarely
painted outdoors, preferring the studied and controlled environment of the
studio. Douglas Druick compared his still-lifes with those executed by Edouard
Manet:
‘Fantin also has shown more interest than Manet in breaking
away from the conventions of still-life composition. Where Manet, following
tradition, has aligned the various objects on a buffet, parallel to the picture
plane, Fantin has looked for an arrangement that, while controlled, suggests
the randomness of nature […] This successful compromise between order and
disorder allowed Fantin the best of both worlds’ (D. Druick in Fantin-Latour (exhibition
catalogue), National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, 1983, p. 124). This
truthfulness to nature is beautifully exemplified in the present work in the
richness of flowers in the vase and the seemingly spontaneous arrangement of
the fruits spilling out of the plates. The versatility and endless
possibilities offered by these subjects provided the artist with an infinite
source of inspiration, and the present composition demonstrates the mastery and
refinement that he had already reached in the early stages of his career as a
painter.

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