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Mathilde Vollmoeller-Purrmann
Still Life with Fruit, ca. 1906-1907

Audio Stories

What’s so compelling about this still life?

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JANET BISHOP: 

Still lifes are just such an interesting subject for artists. I think one of the things that is so compelling about them is the way that forms like fruit and a bowl and a table offer the opportunity for an exploration of shape and color. If you look closely at the individual fruits in this painting, each one almost looks like an abstract painting ― there’s so many different colors going on ― there’s lots happening. 

This painting is by Mathilde Vollmoeller. Vollmoeller arrived in Paris from Germany in 1906 and she was a student of Matisse’s, but her real influence was Cézanne, and I think you can see that really clearly in this still life with its fruit in the bowl and the shimmering tablecloth on a kind of upturned surface.  

This painting has been in SFMOMA’s collection for many years and for a long time it was misattributed as having been painted by Vollmoeller’s husband, Hans Purrmann. When we were doing research a number of years ago, we discovered that it was actually made by Mathilde Vollmoeller, which was a super exciting discovery. Vollmoeller is not someone who’s particularly well known, but clearly she was a really good painter. 

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Artwork Info

Artwork title
Still Life with Fruit
Artist name
Mathilde Vollmoeller-Purrmann
Date created
ca. 1906-1907
Classification
painting
Medium
oil on canvas
Dimensions
26 in. × 32 in. × 2 1/4 in. (66.04 cm × 81.28 cm × 5.72 cm)
Date acquired
1992
Credit
Collection SFMOMA
Bequest of Esther Pollack
Copyright
© Estate of Mathilde Vollmoeller-Purrmann
Permanent URL
https://www.sfmoma.org/artwork/92.136
Artwork status
Not on view at this time.

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