Pierre-Joseph Redouté (1759–1840)
Plum Branches Intertwined, 1802–4
Watercolor on vellum
12 9/16 x 10 3/8 in. (31.9 x 26.4 cm)
Bequest of Charles A. Ryskamp, 2010
© The Frick Collection
Redouté devoted his life to botanical painting, largely thanks to the patronage of Joséphine Bonaparte, first wife of Napoleon, whose gardens at Malmaison, outside Paris, provided inspiration for much of his work. In his youth, he traveled through Flanders and the Netherlands, encountering works by artists such as Rachel Ruysch and Jan van Huysum, known especially for their paintings of elaborate floral arrangements. Redouté’s early works capture single flowers and buds with meticulous detail. In addition to his thousands of floral illustrations, Redouté also painted fruit, placing it in bowls for still lifes or in bunches, as in this harmonious arrangement of yellow and blue plums. Works of this kind were usually destined for art collectors. In delicate washes of blue, green, and gold, the artist portrays the fruit’s subtle gradations of tone and evokes the powdery coating on the skins. Using a visual trope typical of Dutch and Flemish prototypes, Redouté adds droplets of water to the golden plum at the forefront, suggesting its freshness.