Lot Essay
Isabelle Rouault has confirmed the authenticity of this painting.
In the early 1930s Marie Cuttoli commissioned Rouault to paint his first group of floral still-lifes, which she intended to use as cartoons for tapestries. Approximately thirty canvases were painted by the artist and about ten tapestries were woven by the Aubusson craftsmen between 1930 and 1937. The artist executed this series of Fleurs décoratives using a bright palette and framing the composition with prominent borders, clearly paying homage to the traditional art of tapestry making. Bernard Dorival attributes the prevalence of flowers in the artist's mature work to his spiritual evolution in the post-war years, and to his discovery of "the beauty of nature, and of a Nature in which a radiant sun appears almost constantly...(and of) the beauty of one of the most marvellous of nature's creations: The flower" (B. Dorival and I. Rouault, Rouault, l'oeuvre peint, Monte-Carlo, 1988, vol. II, p. 14).
In the early 1930s Marie Cuttoli commissioned Rouault to paint his first group of floral still-lifes, which she intended to use as cartoons for tapestries. Approximately thirty canvases were painted by the artist and about ten tapestries were woven by the Aubusson craftsmen between 1930 and 1937. The artist executed this series of Fleurs décoratives using a bright palette and framing the composition with prominent borders, clearly paying homage to the traditional art of tapestry making. Bernard Dorival attributes the prevalence of flowers in the artist's mature work to his spiritual evolution in the post-war years, and to his discovery of "the beauty of nature, and of a Nature in which a radiant sun appears almost constantly...(and of) the beauty of one of the most marvellous of nature's creations: The flower" (B. Dorival and I. Rouault, Rouault, l'oeuvre peint, Monte-Carlo, 1988, vol. II, p. 14).