- The Orange Trees
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With brilliant hues of reds, greens, purples, and yellows, laid down in the flickering brushwork typical of Impressionism, Gustave Caillebotte has captured the decidedly modern theme of refined leisure activities.
In “The Orange Trees,” Caillebotte’s brother Martial and their young cousin Zoe, both elegantly dressed, relax in the park-like garden of the family villa at Yerres, just outside of Paris. The painting contains all the basic elements of the modern style. The sundrenched scene, with the almost palpable summer heat radiating off the garden path, was most likely painted out of doors, according to the Impressionist canon. The short, sketchy brushstrokes embody Caillebotte’s desire to capture a fleeting moment—that instant before the light changes and the feeling of delicious quiet and repose could be disrupted.
Yet even these Impressionist aspects do not account fully for the striking nature of “The Orange Trees.” Inspired by photography, Japanese prints, and the aesthetics of Baron Haussmann’s newly constructed boulevards and uniform apartment buildings of modern Paris, Caillebotte explored a new way of seeing and transposing that vision onto a two-dimensional plane.
ProvenanceCaillebotte family, Paris; [Bernard Lorenceau, Paris]; [Feilchenfeldt Galleries, Zurich, 1968]; Mr. John A. and Mrs. Audrey Jones Beck, Houston, 1968–1998; given by Mrs. Audrey Jones Beck to MFAH, 1998.
Exhibition History"4me Exposition Impressioniste," 28 Avenue de l'Opéra, Paris, 1879.
"The Collection of John A. and Audrey Jones Beck," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1974.
"Gustave Caillebotte, a Retrospective Exhibition," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; The Brooklyn Museum, 1976–77.
"A Magic Mirror: The Portrait in France 1700-1900," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1986–87.
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