
Antique Fruits by Adolphe Millot
This fruit study by Adolphe Millot is a product of the encyclopaedic tradition at its most refined — specimens arranged with taxonomic intent but rendered with a painter's eye for colour and form. Figs, pomegranates, and stone fruits are depicted in cross-section and whole, their interiors as carefully observed as their skins. The palette is warm and autumnal, grounded in the earthy tones of late 19th-century chromolithographic printing, where every shade required a separate pass of the press.
Transferred to canvas, the illustration's natural warmth deepens. The woven surface gives body to the brushwork and pulls the colours into a softness that makes this canvas print feel genuinely painted — not merely reproduced.
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Antique Fruits by Adolphe Millot
This fruit study by Adolphe Millot is a product of the encyclopaedic tradition at its most refined — specimens arranged with taxonomic intent but rendered with a painter's eye for colour and form. Figs, pomegranates, and stone fruits are depicted in cross-section and whole, their interiors as carefully observed as their skins. The palette is warm and autumnal, grounded in the earthy tones of late 19th-century chromolithographic printing, where every shade required a separate pass of the press.
Transferred to canvas, the illustration's natural warmth deepens. The woven surface gives body to the brushwork and pulls the colours into a softness that makes this canvas print feel genuinely painted — not merely reproduced.
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This fruit study by Adolphe Millot is a product of the encyclopaedic tradition at its most refined — specimens arranged with taxonomic intent but rendered with a painter's eye for colour and form. Figs, pomegranates, and stone fruits are depicted in cross-section and whole, their interiors as carefully observed as their skins. The palette is warm and autumnal, grounded in the earthy tones of late 19th-century chromolithographic printing, where every shade required a separate pass of the press.
Transferred to canvas, the illustration's natural warmth deepens. The woven surface gives body to the brushwork and pulls the colours into a softness that makes this canvas print feel genuinely painted — not merely reproduced.























