
Still Life with a Curtain
Paul Cézanne·1898
Historical Context
Still Life with a Curtain from 1898, at the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, is among the most complex of Cézanne's late still life arrangements, with a curtain hanging behind the fruit creating a deep, dense background of draped folds. Russian collectors acquired this and numerous other major Cézannes through the dealers Vollard and Durand-Ruel, recognizing his importance at a time when his influence was primarily felt among avant-garde artists. The curtain device — also used in his monumental Bathers — introduces a theatrical, almost baroque element into the concentrated still-life space. By 1898 his technique had reached its most complex structural development.
Technical Analysis
The heavy draped curtain creates a complex background of folds that Cézanne renders with the same analytical attention he gives the fruit — each fold a plane of color that defines form. The interaction of foreground fruit and background curtain creates a visual depth achieved through color rather than conventional perspective.
Look Closer
- ◆The curtain in Cézanne's still life receives the same geometrical analysis he applies to his fruit.
- ◆The curtain's pattern rendered as flat colour areas — textile design reduced to pure chromatic fact.
- ◆Objects behind the curtain are partially occluded — creating spatial ambiguity between depths.
- ◆The curtain's vertical folds create linear elements contrast with the rounded volumes of the fruit.
 - BF286 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF1179 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF577 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF534 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)



