Still Life with Teapot and Fruit
Paul Gauguin, 1896
About this artwork
In the serene "Still Life with Teapot Fruit," painted by Paul Gauguin in1896, everyday objects—a gleaming teapot and lush fruits—take center stage in a composition that belies the artist's revolutionary spirit. This oil on canvas, measuring 18 3/4 x 26 inches, captures Gauguin's Post-Impressionist flair during his transformative years in Tahiti, he sought escape from European conventions. The work exemplifies his shift toward bold, flattened forms and vibrant colors, drawing from Japanese prints and Polynesian motifs to infuse domestic scenes with symbolic depth. Gauguin, a pioneer of Symbolism and Primitivism, elevated still lifes beyond mere representation, using them to evoke exoticism and introspection. Here, the teapot and fruits likely nod to both Western bourgeois comfort and the tropical abundance he encountered abroad, blending familiarity with otherworldliness. Oil on canvas allowed Gauguin's masterful layering of impasto and glazes, creating a tactile richness that draws viewers into his dreamlike world. Now part of The Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings collection, thanks to the Annenberg bequest, this piece invites us to savor Gauguin's genius for turning the ordinary into the profound—a timeless reminder of art's power to transport us.