Lot Essay
Depicting a lady taking tea and her servant in an imagined Orient, this composition follows an artistic template which Ernst varied frequently, alternating settings and props to create different effects. The rose-covered portico and the garden evening setting, for example, both recur frequently in his oeuvre, and are designed to convey a sense of languid indolence. Other characteristics include the artist's preoccupation with surface texture and, above all, with bright colours -- pink, turquoise and purple -- designed to heighten the sense of the exotic.
Most of the objects Ernst includes in his paintings are from his own personal collection. Similarly to Jean-Léon Gérôme and Ludwig Deutsch, with whom he was close friends, Ernst had gathered a sizeable group of artefacts from the Middle East, including ceramic tiles, lamps, pottery, silk, satins and kaftans, from his travels to Moorish Spain, Morocco, Tunis and Istanbul during the 1880s.
Most of the objects Ernst includes in his paintings are from his own personal collection. Similarly to Jean-Léon Gérôme and Ludwig Deutsch, with whom he was close friends, Ernst had gathered a sizeable group of artefacts from the Middle East, including ceramic tiles, lamps, pottery, silk, satins and kaftans, from his travels to Moorish Spain, Morocco, Tunis and Istanbul during the 1880s.