Goldfish

Goldfish

Meet the artist

Henri Matisse
Henri Matisse1869–1954French

Dates

1912

Specifications

Original title
Les Poissons rouges
Dimensions
140 × 98 cm

About the Artwork

Goldfish is a vibrant still life that captures Henri Matisse's enduring fascination with color, pattern, and the contemplative qualities of aquatic life. The composition centers on a glass bowl containing four goldfish, their vivid orange bodies providing a brilliant focal point against the surrounding pinks and greens of a lush indoor garden. Plants, a round table, and the suggestion of a conservatory setting frame the bowl, creating a layered, almost tropical atmosphere.

The painting emerged from Matisse's transformative visits to Tangier, Morocco, where he observed locals spending long hours watching goldfish in bowls, a practice he found deeply meditative. Returning to his studio and garden conservatory at Issy-les-Moulineaux near Paris, he translated this experience into a series of goldfish paintings, of which this is the most celebrated. The work displays Matisse's innovative approach to spatial perspective, allowing the viewer to see the fish simultaneously from the front and from above.

The Russian collector Sergei Shchukin purchased the painting directly from Matisse's studio in 1912, adding it to his extraordinary collection of modern French art. After the Russian Revolution, the collection was nationalized, and the painting has been displayed at Moscow's Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts since 1948.

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