
Still Life with a Watermelon and Pomegranates
(1900-1906)
Rocks above Château Noir
(c. 1904)
This work consists of five rounded objects, including a melon, two pomegranates, a carafe, and a white sugar bowl –
which also appears in
Dish of Apples.
It is an exquisite watercolor that centers its subjects on top of a table. The piece
was composed using graphite to give Cézanne’s theme its form before he used transparent color to literally bring this still
life to prominence. The layering, shadows, and mirroring in this work are breathtaking in their composition.
He induces space, suggestion, and light by leaving elements of the canvas white; for example, note the table edge
in the foreground which is completely overridden to the right of the canvas by the purple wash. There is spatial definition
here while the colors give a vibrant intensity.
At the turn of the 20
th
century, when Cézanne returned to his hometown, it was here that he found tranquility in Mont
Sainte-Victoire and the Bibémus quarries. These subjects were to appear in many of his works and become part of his
experimentation up to the time of his death. In this painting, the artist depicts a pile of rocks and tree trunks. The rocks
and the trees frame the painting and help to bring the subject up close and personal with the audience. In this painting,
the brush strokes are fairly allusive and helped to add to an increasingly subtle, timeless vision achieved by Cézanne. The
use of colors in his unique approach was to become an essential foundation for modern paintings of the 20
th
century.
The painting was acquired by Matisse, who noted that Cézanne’s use of colors provided: “a force within a painting.”
This work, produced two years before his death, is a solid representation and celebration of the countryside around
his home. It reflects a time when he was obsessed with color – in order to give form and presence – and solidity. It shows
how he wanted to portray the forces of the earth and, despite the “stillness” of the piece, there is much movement and
the suggestion that it is only a matter of time before the rocks move ever downward. Again, without the obvious religious
reference, there is still a nod to the relationship that the artist had found with God at this time. For Cézanne, these
landscapes represented artistic inspiration coupled with a spiritual serenity.
• Watercolor over graphite on laid paper, 12.4 in x 19.2 in (31.4 cm x 48.8 cm)
• Oil on canvas, 25.6 in x 21.3 in (65 cm x 54 cm)
Cézanne, Paul (1839-1906): Still-Life with a Watermelon and Pomegranates, 1900-1906. New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art. Watercolor over graphite on laid paper, sheet:
12 3/8 x 19 3/16 in (31.4 x 48.8 cm). The Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg Collection, Gift of Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg, 2001, Bequest of Walter H. Annenberg, 2002.
Inv. 2001.202.1. © 2013. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence
Cézanne, Paul (1839-1906): Rocher pres des grottes au dessus du chateau noir, 1904. Paris, Musee d’Orsay. Dim. 0.65 X 0.54 m. © 2013. White Images/Scala, Florence
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