Still Life with Flowers and Fruit
Henri Fantin-Latour, 1866
About this artwork
Henri Fantin-Lat's *Still Life with and Fruit* (1866) invites visitors into the intimate world of 19th French domesticity. Painted in oil on canvas—a medium prized for its ability to render lush textures and glowing light—this 28 3/4 x 23 5/8-inch masterpiece captures vases brimming with vibrant flowers alongside ripe fruit. Fantin-Latour, a master of Realism, elevated everyday objects into poetic meditations on beauty and ephemerality, showcasing his precise brushwork and subtle tonal harmonies. Active during the Second Empire era, when the Paris Salon championed such meticulous still lifes, Fantin-Latour drew inspiration from Dutch masters like Chardin while aligning with contemporaries such as Courbet and Manet. His technique—velvety petals, dewdrops on fruit, and soft shadows—creates a tactile illusion, drawing the eye to nature's fleeting perfection. This work exemplifies how still life, once a humble genre, became a vehicle for virtuosic display and quiet contemplation. Acquired by The Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1980 through a generous gift exchange, it remains a gem in the European Paintings collection. Pause here to savor its timeless allure, a reminder of art's power to preserve life's delicate moments.