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Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit
Paul Cézanne·1900
Historical Context
Still Life with Milk Jug and Fruit (c.1900), at the National Gallery of Art, belongs to the culminating phase of Cézanne's extraordinary still-life practice. Over four decades he had used the still life as a laboratory for his investigations into the relationship between sensation and structure, and by 1900 his arrangements of fruit, vessels, and drapery had achieved a density of analysis unequalled in European painting. The milk jug—a simple domestic vessel—was a recurring object in his still lifes, its cylindrical form presenting known formal problems that he could approach afresh in each new arrangement, exploring how the same object could be painted differently in different contexts and light conditions.
Technical Analysis
The milk jug's cylindrical form is rendered through Cézanne's signature passage of modulated colour—planes of related hues that shift imperceptibly from warm to cool to suggest roundness without conventional shading. The fruit surrounding it is similarly constructed, each apple or pear built from a mosaic of carefully considered colour touches. The drapery beneath and behind is organised into large planes that create compositional structure for the arrangement.
Look Closer
- ◆The milk jug's surface is painted in curved strokes that follow its ceramic contour — Cézanne used the brush direction itself to describe three-dimensional form.
- ◆Apples and oranges are placed asymmetrically across the table — the composition deliberately uncentred to create spatial tension.
- ◆The tablecloth's fold where it drapes over the table edge creates a sharp diagonal that divides the compositional ground.
- ◆The background wall is indicated by broad strokes of warm ochre and cool grey — just enough to establish the still life in a space without defining that space.
- ◆The fruit's shadows are painted in blue-violet — the complementary shadow colour Cézanne borrowed from the Impressionists and made structurally systematic.
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