Lot Essay
Like Ensor's paintings of masks, carnivals and skeletons, his mature still-life paintings of the 1890s also magically convey a sense of an otherworldy reality. Translating the objects of daily life into a strange narrative landscape of familiar but somehow also peculiar form, Ensor's still-lifes seem to depict life as an absurd compendium of objects. Nature morte à l'oeuf au homard et au crabe (Still-life with egg, lobster and crab) is one of the most successful and evocative of these exquisite works. Sharply observed and meticulous in its detail, it is bathed in a bright translucent light, strongly coloured and depicted with such depth of perspective that it begins to take on the atmosphere of a beach scene.
The misty white light that douses the work is reminiscent of the skies of the Belgian coastline where Ensor lived and it is primarily this feature that generates the painting's strong sense of landscape and transcendence.
The misty white light that douses the work is reminiscent of the skies of the Belgian coastline where Ensor lived and it is primarily this feature that generates the painting's strong sense of landscape and transcendence.