Summer Flowers
Henri Fantin-Latour, 1880
About this artwork
Henri Fantin-Latour's *Summer Flowers* (1880) is a captivating oil on canvas still life that celebrates the ephemeral beauty of blooming blossoms. Measuring 20 x 24 3/8 inches, this work captures a lush arrangement of summer blooms—likely roses, peonies, and delicate fillers—arranged with meticulous realism against a softly lit background. Painted during the height of the 19th century, when flower still lifes symbolized abundance, transience, and the passage of seasons, it reflects the French artist's mastery of intimate domestic subjects. Fantin-Latour (1836–1904), a Paris-based painter influenced by Realism and close friends with Édouard Manet and James McNeill Whistler, elevated still life to high art through his precise brushwork and luminous color palette. Oil on canvas allowed him to render velvety textures, subtle dew-kissed petals, and vibrant hues with extraordinary depth, evoking a sense of quiet luxury. His flower paintings, prized by collectors, bridged academic traditions and emerging modern sensibilities. Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department—a 1997 gift from Susan S. Dillon—this piece invites visitors to pause and appreciate nature's fleeting splendor, much as 1880s audiences did amid France's floral fascination in art and gardens.