
Fritillaries in a Copper Vase
Vincent van Gogh·1887
Historical Context
Van Gogh's Fritillaries in a Copper Vase, painted in Paris in 1887, belongs to a pivotal sequence of flower studies he produced after immersion in Japanese woodblock prints. Hiroshige's flat, vibrant botanical compositions directly influenced his approach to floral arrangement, and he began treating flowers as opportunities for pure colour experimentation rather than Baroque still-life convention. Fritillaries — drooping, spotted bell-flowers — gave him unusual pendant forms to work against the vertical axis of the copper vase. The painting hangs in the Musée d'Orsay and represents his Paris period's most refined synthesis of Impressionist touch and Japanese spatial principles.
Technical Analysis
Dense stippled brushwork in the manner of Signac and Pissarro, whom Van Gogh had met in Paris, enlivens the background. The copper vase is modelled with short curved strokes catching reflected colour. The fritillaries themselves are rendered with exceptional lightness against the pale ground.
Look Closer
- ◆The copper vase's gleam is built from a single palette knife highlight over dark underpainting.
- ◆Fritillaries hang their bell-heads in exact botanical downward curves Van Gogh observed precisely.
- ◆The background is divided into warm and cool zones that push the vase forward spatially.
- ◆Tiny comma-strokes of pure yellow appear among the green leaves as notes of light in the foliage.




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