Matisse, Henri - The Red Studio (1911) - Matte Canvas, Framed
Matisse, Henri - The Red Studio (1911) - Matte Canvas, Framed
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Vendor
PrintifySub total
$55

Description
Description
Product Description
Framed Matte Canvas: A Timeless Legacy, Elegantly Bordered
The Masterpieces Collection serves as a bridge to cultural continuity, bringing the depth of art history into the modern sanctuary of your home. By choosing a framed presentation, you elevate these signals of human brilliance from a simple accent to a definitive focal point. This framed matte canvas provides a sophisticated, gallery-ready aesthetic that anchors your space in intentionality and grace.
Eleanor, we understand that finding the perfect frame can often be an overwhelming post-purchase hurdle—one that delays the joy of actually hanging your art. We’ve pre-emptively solved this by pairing our archival-grade canvas with a sustainably sourced pinewood frame. It arrives finished and ready to grace your walls, ensuring that the transition from our studio to your home is effortless and immediately rewarding.
- Premium Composition: A cotton and polyester composite canvas featuring a specialized proprietary coating that ensures vibrant, eye-catching detail and long-lasting color integrity.
- Sustainably Sourced: Both the pinewood frame and the internal radial pine stretcher bars are FSC-certified from renewable forests, honoring a commitment to mindful stewardship.
- Safety and Clarity: Printed with UL-certified Greenguard Gold latex inks, our canvases are non-hazardous, non-toxic, and non-flammable, providing a vivid resonance that is safe for every room in your home.
- Ready to Hang: Each piece comes with sawtooth hanging hardware already attached, ensuring a seamless installation.
- Artisan Precision: Our frames are available in four colors to complement your unique decor. Due to the specialized production process, please allow for a slight size deviation tolerance of +/- 1/8" (3.2mm).
Care Instructions
Maintenance is intentionally straightforward to ensure your artwork remains a pristine fixture in your home. If the canvas or frame gathers dust over time, simply wipe it off gently with a clean, damp cloth.
The Story
The Story
The Red That Swallowed Time
Henri Matisse stood in his Issy-les-Moulineaux studio in 1911 and decided to drown the world in Venetian red. It was a bold move for a man whose main patron, Sergei Shchukin, would eventually look at the canvas and say no thanks. Most people want a room they can walk into. Matisse gave them a room that swallows them whole. The canvas is a massive thing, over six feet tall and seven feet wide, but it feels like it could expand to fill the whole building.
The walls and the floor and the furniture are all the same aggressive hue. He didn’t paint the table or the chairs in the traditional sense, he painted the red around them. The objects are just ghosts of negative space defined by what isn’t there. It’s a brilliant trick of subtraction. He was fresh off the scandals of the Fauves, still carrying the scent of revolution, and he wanted to see if color alone could hold a room together. It turns out it can, provided you are brave enough to let the perspective fall apart.
Look at the grandfather clock. It has no hands. Matisse wasn’t being lazy, he was making a point. In this space, time has no dominion. Art doesn’t care about the minutes ticking away toward a deadline or a dinner party. It just exists. The furniture? is an illusion. The floor is a lie. The only things with any real weight are the pieces of art he tucked into the corners, reminding us that while the chairs might fade, the work remains.
Scattered around this crimson void are miniatures of his own earlier works. He was curating his own life while he was still living it. He put his sculptures and his paintings on display like a gallery within a gallery. It is meta and entirely self-aware. By the time the painting hit London in 1912, the world was still catching up to the idea that a room does not need three dimensions to be real. It just needs a vision strong enough to hold the light.
References
Barr, Alfred H. Matisse, His Art and His Public. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1951.
Flam, Jack. Matisse on Art. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995.
Gottlieb, Carla. The Meaning of Matisse's The Red Studio. The Art Bulletin, vol. 48, no. 3/4, 1966, pp. 399-404.
Shipping & Satisfaction
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.
