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Cézanne, Paul - Basket of Apples (1893) - Suitcase

Cézanne, Paul - Basket of Apples (1893) - Suitcase

Regular price $225
Sale price $225 Regular price
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Vendor

Printify

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$225
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Description

The Masterpiece Hard-Shell Travel Case

Curated Movement for the Intentional Traveler.

Art in Motion

Travel is often a series of transitions through noisy, crowded spaces. This hard-shell suitcase from the Masterpieces Collection ensures that your personal aesthetic remains uninterrupted, even on the move. Featuring high-resolution art history masterpieces encapsulated within a durable polycarbonate shell, this case transforms a practical necessity into a mobile statement of heritage and style.

Resilient Sophistication

Designed for those who value both form and function, the case utilizes a hybrid construction: a high-impact polycarbonate front to protect the artwork and a lightweight ABS back for scratch and temperature resistance. The 360° swivel double-wheels and adjustable telescopic handle ensure effortless, silent movement through any environment, allowing you to maintain your peace and your pace.

Intelligent Interior

The interior is designed for the mindful organizer. Featuring a removable lining under a secure rubber seal and dedicated inner pockets, it provides the structure needed to keep your essentials in order. For longer journeys, the largest size offers an expandable storage option, ensuring you never have to compromise on what you carry with you.


Technical Features

  • Construction: High-impact Polycarbonate front with a durable, scratch-resistant ABS back.
  • Movement: Four 360° swivel double-wheels for silent, multi-directional gliding.
  • Security: Built-in TSA-compliant lock for enhanced peace of mind.
  • Interior: Removable inner lining and dual internal pockets for organized storage.
  • Aesthetic Note: To achieve the highest possible resolution, the artwork is printed on a specialized canvas and encapsulated within the PC shell. Please note that this artisan process may result in slight, organic creasing near the suitcase's edges—a hallmark of the unique technology used to merge fine art with high-durability travel gear.

      Small Medium Large
    Height (with wheels), in 22.00 26.00 30.00
    Length, in 9.00 10.00 11.00
    Width, in 14.00 18.00 20.00
    Handle Length, in 15.00 18.50 22.00
     

Care & Maintenance

To preserve the brilliance of your travel case, please follow these care guidelines:

  • Preparation: Remove all items from the case before cleaning.
  • Surface Care: For visible stains or scuffs, pretreat the area with a mild stain remover.
  • Cleaning: Mix warm water with a gentle laundry detergent. Use a soft terry cloth or a soft-bristle brush to clean the outer shell and handles.
  • Drying: Always allow the case to air dry completely before storage or use.
The Story

The Architecture of the Apple

Paul Cezanne wasn’t interested in painting fruit because he was hungry or interested in the decorative traditions of the Dutch masters. He painted apples because they didn't move. Cezanne was notorious for taking weeks to stare at them until the skins broke and the studio smelled like fermentation, trying to capture their essence on the canvas.

While the rest of the world was falling apart in 1893, Cezanne was in a self-imposed exile in Provence, trying to find the permanent ‘bones of the universe’. He was done with the flickering, blurry light of the Impressionists. He wanted something heavy. Something solid. Something that would last.

The Basket of Apples is a deliberate act of sabotage against traditional perspective. Look at the table. It doesn't line up. The left side exists in a different reality than the right. The bottle tilts as if it’s caught in a localized earthquake. This wasn't a mistake by a clumsy amateur. It was a calculated strike against the Renaissance.

Cezanne was showing you that the human eye doesn't see a static, frozen world from a single point. We move. We shift. We see things from multiple angles at once. Cezanne understands that viewers will forgive the artist for depicting impossible distortions and empirical paradoxes. Instead, our brains choose to betray what the eyes report faithfully in favor of a composited ideal, wholly invented by the mind in a concept of reality which we humans find far easier to comprehend than what actually is.

Cezanne used heavy black outlines to pin the world down. He treated a piece of fruit with the same structural gravity as a mountain. By the time he was done, he hadn't just painted a still life, he had built a philosophical bridge for the next generation of Art Innovators to walk across confidently. Without this table of rotting fruit, there is no Picasso. There is no Cubism. There is only a world of pretty, fleeting shadows. Cezanne gave art back its skeleton.

References

Cezanne, P., & Danchev, A. The Letters of Paul Cezanne. Thames & Hudson. 2013.

Gowing, L. Cezanne. Thames & Hudson. 1988.

Rewald, J. The Paintings of Paul Cezanne: A Catalogue Raisonne. Harry N. Abrams. 1996.

Shiff, R. Cezanne and the End of Impressionism: A Study of the Theory, Copying, and Design of French Modernism. University of Chicago Press. 1984.

Shipping & Satisfaction

Shipping & Satisfaction

Free shipping on all US orders, always.

Every order ships to US addresses at no additional cost. Allow up to 10 business days from fulfillment for delivery.

Your investment is protected. Material or print defects are replaced or fully refunded — no friction, no negotiation. If the work doesn't resonate aesthetically within 5 days of receipt, reach out and we'll make it right.

One note worth reading before you order: because every piece is produced on demand, we're unable to accommodate returns for incorrect size selections. Consult the product specs before you commit — they're there to make sure what arrives is exactly what you envisioned.

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