
Ginger Pot with Pomegranate and Pears
Paul Cézanne·1893
Historical Context
This 1893-1894 Phillips Collection canvas of a ginger pot with pomegranate and pears represents Cézanne's late still life at its most concentrated. The ginger pot — a specific glazed ceramic vessel he painted in several compositions — brings its Asian decorative character into dialogue with the local Provençal fruit around it. The pomegranate, with its rich red color and exotic associations, adds a note of Mediterranean specificity alongside the more familiar pears. Duncan Phillips, the Washington collector, assembled the finest American collection of Cézanne's work, and the Phillips Collection canvases are among the best-contextualized of his still lifes.
Technical Analysis
The ceramic pot and surrounding fruit are each rendered with attentive study of their specific material qualities — the glazed pot's reflective surface, the pomegranate's leathery skin, the soft matte surface of pears. Cézanne's parallel strokes apply consistently across all objects, creating compositional unity through method.
Look Closer
- ◆The pomegranate is cut open, its seeds exposed — an unusual choice that reveals interior colour structure rather than presenting the fruit as a smooth exterior.
- ◆The ginger pot's bulbous body is rendered from a slightly elevated viewpoint while the pomegranate is viewed from the side — Cézanne's signature multi-viewpoint approach.
- ◆Pears on the right side are placed at slightly different orientations — one leaning left, one upright — subtle variation that prevents the arrangement from becoming decorative.
- ◆The tablecloth shows visible folds and creases — fabric as complex form given the same analytical treatment as ceramic and fruit.
- ◆Warm orange-red of the pomegranate seeds radiates from the centre of the composition, anchoring the arrangement's chromatic energy.
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