24 December: open from 10.00 to 15.00. 25 December: museum closed. 

Wilhelm Trübner was associated with the realist movement that developed around the figure of Wilhelm Leibl in Munich in the 1870s. His use of colour and treatment of light, combined with an increasingly loose brushstroke, would subsequently bring him closer to the German Impressionists. Trübner is noted for his portraits, landscapes and still lifes, the latter including some spare, refined depictions of flowers.

The present vase of flowers, painted during the artist’s Munich period between 1874 and 1896, is an example of that type of work. A simple glass vase on which the light falls rests on a bare table in front of a dark background. The vase contains vivid red flowers whose stalks can be seen through the glass. On the table beside the vase lie a few petals with a fading white chrysanthemum in the foreground. This type of composition and the treatment of the chiaroscuro may have been inspired by the Dutch tradition of still-life painting with which Trübner was familiar.

CM

s. XIX - Pintura europea. RealismoPaintingOilpanel
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