French Clouds Tray
Description
The French academic painters of the 19th century understood something the Impressionists would later codify: that the sky is never a background. It is the subject. The cloud studies produced in France from the Barbizon period onward — precise, atmospheric, painted in changing light — are some of the most honest images in European art. This tray carries one such sky: a gathering of cumulus at the particular hour when the light begins to do interesting things and the clouds declare their full three-dimensional weight against the blue.
The French Clouds Tray presents the sky as a domestic object — a surface for carrying things with the atmosphere of a well-observed afternoon in the Vaucluse or the Oise. The glossy finish gives the painted sky its luminosity; the lipped edge keeps it functional. It works equally well as a serving piece, a bedside tray, or a desk organizer for people who prefer their objects to carry some visual intelligence.
Available in four sizes. The large format carries the full composition with its proportions intact; the desk tidy brings a concentrated fragment of the same sky to a writing surface.
A Note from Jeff
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