
Jug Flowers Blue and Orange Papiers Découpés Art Exhibition
A generous ceramic jug anchors this exuberant bouquet composition, rendered in the flat, decisive language of Matisse's paper cut-outs. Flowers spill upward and outward — each petal a separate, confident shape clipped from vivid blue and orange — while the vessel itself is reduced to a few bold curves that read as both vessel and gesture. The interplay between still-life tradition and modernist abstraction gives the piece its particular charge: recognisable subject, radically simplified form.
On canvas, the overlapping petals and strong vessel silhouette gain tactile presence through the woven surface. Colour sits deeper and richer than on paper, making the bouquet feel full and alive. This canvas print rewards close viewing as much as it commands a room.
A generous ceramic jug anchors this exuberant bouquet composition, rendered in the flat, decisive language of Matisse's paper cut-outs. Flowers spill upward and outward — each petal a separate, confident shape clipped from vivid blue and orange — while the vessel itself is reduced to a few bold curves that read as both vessel and gesture. The interplay between still-life tradition and modernist abstraction gives the piece its particular charge: recognisable subject, radically simplified form.
On canvas, the overlapping petals and strong vessel silhouette gain tactile presence through the woven surface. Colour sits deeper and richer than on paper, making the bouquet feel full and alive. This canvas print rewards close viewing as much as it commands a room.
Original: $38.84
-65%$38.84
$13.59Description
A generous ceramic jug anchors this exuberant bouquet composition, rendered in the flat, decisive language of Matisse's paper cut-outs. Flowers spill upward and outward — each petal a separate, confident shape clipped from vivid blue and orange — while the vessel itself is reduced to a few bold curves that read as both vessel and gesture. The interplay between still-life tradition and modernist abstraction gives the piece its particular charge: recognisable subject, radically simplified form.
On canvas, the overlapping petals and strong vessel silhouette gain tactile presence through the woven surface. Colour sits deeper and richer than on paper, making the bouquet feel full and alive. This canvas print rewards close viewing as much as it commands a room.























