
bunch of flowers
Historical Context
bunch of flowers (1875) by Adolphe Joseph Thomas Monticelli, now in the collection of Centraal Museum, demonstrates the artist's skill in the still life genre, transforming everyday objects or natural specimens into studies of color, light, and painterly observation. Adolphe Monticelli was a Marseille-born painter whose wildly impastoed late Romantic figure scenes exercised a powerful influence on Van Gogh, who collected his work and explicitly modeled certain paintings on Monticelli's technique. Working in the tradition of Watteau's fête galante — elegantly dressed figures in park settings — but treating them with an almost expressionist freedom of color and surface.
Technical Analysis
Monticelli applied paint with extraordinary impasto thickness — sometimes inches deep — building richly encrusted surfaces that transform his romantic fête galante subjects into glittering tapestries of color.



 - A Vase of Wild Flowers - NG5015 - National Gallery.jpg&width=600)


