Still Life with Peaches
Auguste Renoir, 1881
About this artwork
Auguste Renoir's *Still Life with Peaches (1881), an oil on canvas measuring 21 x 25½ inches, exemplifies the Impressionist master's fascination with everyday beauty and the play of light. Painted during the height of the Impressionist movement in France, this work captures a simple arrangement of ripe peaches, their soft fuzz and glistening surfaces rendered with Renoir's signature loose, vibrant brushstrokes. As a still life, it showcases his ability to infuse ordinary objects with sensuous vitality, a departure from the academic rigor of earlier traditions. Renoir, a key figure in Impressionism alongside Monet and Pissarro, used this intimate genre to experiment with color and texture. The juicy peaches glow under diffused light, their warm oranges and subtle shadows evoking abundance and the fleeting freshness of summer fruit. This technique highlights Impressionism's emphasis on perception over precise detail, inviting viewers to experience the tactile allure of the scene. Now housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department through the 1960 bequest of Stephen C. Clark, the painting remains a testament to Renoir's enduring celebration of life's pleasures. Visitors are drawn to its warmth, a perfect introduction to how 19th-century innovators transformed the still life into a canvas of joy.