Still Life With Pears

Technique: Giclée quality print
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More about this artwork

Venture into the serene world of Marsden Hartley's "Still Life With Pears," a remarkable artwork that captures the simple beauty and quietude of everyday objects. In this captivating painting, Hartley masterfully portrays a group of pears resting gently on a soft, drapery-like surface. The artist uses bold strokes and a subdued palette of earthy browns and deep blues, creating a sense of depth and texture that invites viewers to reach out and touch the velvety skin of the fruit.Each pear, with its rich, golden-brown hues, appears ripe and weighty, showcasing Hartley's skill in rendering form and volume. The background, hinted with sketches of blue, enhances the warmth of the pears and suggests a cool, shadowy space behind them. This contrast not only emphasizes the solidity of the fruit but also adds a lyrical quality to the composition, as if the pears are momentarily paused in a timeless dance of light and color."Still Life With Pears" is more than just a depiction of fruit; it is an exploration of texture, color, and the subtle interplay of light.

Delivery

Reproductions are made to order and take 5 to 7 working days.

We send them out by courier and delivery takes another two working days.

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Returns

Yes, reproductions can be returned.

If you have any doubts more than 30 days after the date of purchase, please contact us - we will take the reproduction back for a refund or offer you a replacement!

We accept a maximum of two returns per customer - please note that we make reproductions to order, so please choose responsibly.

We do not refund shipping expenses.

Marsden Hartley (1877–1943) is a Maine native and a leading American Modernist painter, along with his contemporaries, Arthur Dove and Georgia O’Keeffe. He is well-known for employing geometric abstraction as well as bold colors and lines. His paintings depicted imagery of nature, landscapes, figures, and still-life. Sponsored by Alfred Stieglitz, Hartley went to Europe in 1912, spending most of his time in Germany, where he met Gertrude Stein, Wassily Kandinsky, and Franz Marc. After returning to America in 1930, he reconnected with the New England of his childhood and started to portray the landscapes of New England in his paintings.