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  • Henri Matisse
    Dec 31, 1869 - Nov 3, 1954
  • Still Life with Oranges - Henri Matisse was an artist often regarded as the most important French painter of the 20th century. He was the leader of the Fauvist movement about 1900, and he pursued the expressiveness of color throughout his career. His subjects were largely domestic or figurative, and a distinct Mediterranean verve presides in the treatment.
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Still Life with Oranges
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  • Still Life with Oranges

  • Henri Matisse
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  • Nature morte aux oranges, 1898
    Oil on canvas
    Private collection, Japan.

    Painted in 1898, Nature morte is filled with colour. The fruit in the bowl and the striations of the light reflected in the central vessel show an impressive confidence. Crucially, the picture conveys a sense of stability, of the solidity of the objects depicted, that appears to owe more to Cézanne or to Gauguin than it does to the Impressionists. Looking at Nature morte, it is therefore telling to read Matisse's words about the Impressionists: 'A rapid rendering of a landscape represents only one moment of its existence. I prefer, by insisting upon its essential character, to risk losing charm in order to gain greater stability' (Matisse, quoted in P. Schneider, Matisse, London, 1984, p. 73).

    Nature morte was painted in 1898, a year of significant breakthroughs for Matisse. For it was in 1898 that he surpassed many of the influences to which he had formerly submitted. In Nature morte, it is clear that Matisse has moved through the Impressionist phase that resulted in his early masterpiece, La desserte of the previous year. Light is crucial, but more so are the bold areas of colour that prefigure the Fauve palette that Matisse would increasingly adopt over the forthcoming years. Many of the advances that Matisse made during 1898 were due to the relative seclusion in which he kept himself, for he spent his time away from Paris for the majority of the year, instead spending his time in the South of France and in Corsica. There, the light had a huge impact on him, especially taken in conjunction with the sight of Turner's paintings.

    It was also in 1898 that he had visited London on honeymoon, mainly in order to see the works of Turner, a move that had been suggested by Pissarro and which resulted in a new appreciation of light. And in seeing Turner, Matisse passed on from the Impressionism that had formerly influenced him. For in Turner's paintings, Matisse saw not only light, but a means of creating an intense and dreamlike sense of beauty that was rooted in but that did not slavishly represent the scenes that nature presented. This was an interest that Matisse took to new levels, considering his art to consist 'of a meditation on nature, on the expression of a dream inspired by reality' (Matisse, quoted in ibid., p. 60). This itself appears to be a tribute to Matisse's teacher, Gustave Moreau, who had died earlier in the same year that Nature morte was painted. However, the sheer enjoyment of bold colour that is evident in this picture shows the degree to which Matisse had moved on from Moreau's Symbolist leanings.

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Other paintings by Henri Matisse:

Interior - Open Door
Interior - Open Door
The Little House
The Little House
Woman in the Armchair
Woman in the Armchair
Woman by the Window 1919
Woman by the Window 1919
Henri MatisseHenri-Émile-Benoit Matisse was a French artist whose career spanned over six decades. He was influenced by Georges Seurat and Paul Signac, who painted in a “Pointillist” style with small dots of color rather than full brushstrokes. Matisse’s creativity came to the fore with sensational canvases such as, Luxe, calme et volupté, Open Window, and Woman with a Hat. Although he was initially labeled a Fauve (wild beast), he found his own style, and began to enjoy a greater degree of success. He travelled to travel to Italy, Germany, Spain and North Africa for inspiration. He signed a contract with the prestigious art dealers of Galerie Bernheim-Jeune in Paris. His art was purchased by prominent collectors such as Gertrude Stein and the Russian businessman Sergei I. Shchukin. In his later career, Matisse received several major commissions, such as a mural for the art gallery of collector Dr. Albert Barnes of Pennsylvania and for the Chapel of the Rosary in Venice. Although his subjects were traditional—nudes, figures in landscapes, portraits, interior views—his revolutionary use of brilliant color and exaggerated form to express emotion made him one of the most influential artists of the 20th century.