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Artwork Description Banana and Citrus Still Life on Turquoise Ground* Maurine Manaro’s Banana and Citrus Still Life on Turquoise Ground, painted in 1983, approaches the traditional still-life genre through a distinctly modern concern with color, surface, and compressed pictorial space. Rather than constructing a carefully receding tabletop, Manaro stacks the elements vertically: the glass compote occupies the upper register, while the banana stretches across the lower foreground. This arrangement makes the objects appear to float within a shallow, almost abstract field. The composition depends upon the opposition between rounded and elongated forms. The citrus fruit is organized as a dense collection of spheres, their overlapping contours creating visual weight near the top of the painting. Beneath them, the banana forms a sweeping arc that redirects the viewer’s eye horizontally. Its curved silhouette is echoed more subtly in the rim and foot of the compote, establishing a rhythm of repeated crescents and ellipses. Color provides the work’s primary expressive force. Yellow dominates the arrangement, but Manaro avoids uniformity by moving between lemon, ochre, orange, olive, and acidic green. The turquoise surrounding the objects acts as a complementary foil, causing the warmer fruit to project forward. Brown and plum-colored passages beneath the banana and behind the compote introduce shadow without producing conventional naturalism. Instead, color functions structurally, distinguishing one form from another while preserving the vitality of the painted surface. The handling of the fruit recalls the expressive still-life tradition that emerged from Post-Impressionism and continued through twentieth-century modernism. Artists such as Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, and Pierre Bonnard treated domestic objects not simply as subjects to be copied, but as vehicles through which color and spatial relationships could be reorganized. Manaro’s painting participates in that lineage on a modest and approachable scale. The objects remain clearly recognizable, yet their emotional presence comes less from illusionistic detail than from saturated color and visible brushwork. The glass compote is especially effective. Its rim is defined through loose bands of white, gray, blue, and muted pink rather than precise transparency. The vessel therefore oscillates between object and painted gesture. It appears reflective and translucent while simultaneously calling attention to the marks used to construct it. The choice of a banana also differentiates the work from more conventional arrangements of apples, pears, or flowers. Its exaggerated curve introduces a note of humor and informality, grounding the composition in everyday domestic life. In contrast to still lifes that suggest permanence, luxury, or symbolic abundance, Manaro’s arrangement feels immediate and personal—the contents of a kitchen elevated through attentive looking. Although small in physical scale, the painting has considerable visual energy. Its directness, chromatic intensity, and slightly unconventional fruit arrangement allow it to function equally well as an intimate cabinet picture or as a bright accent within a larger interior. |
*The title of this work was assigned by Visard Gallery. |
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Provenance* 1983: Maurine Manaro 1983 - 2026: Unknown 2026: Secondary Market 2026 - Present: Visard Gallery *Provenance and attribution details are based on our best research and are offered in good faith but are not guaranteed. Please contact us through the contact form with any questions prior to purchase. |
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Banana and Citrus Still Life on Turquoise Ground - Maurine Manaro, c. 1983
$340.00
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