A friend gave me a bouquet of candy-colored pink peonies for my birthday, which I kept for two weeks on my living room table. They transformed from tight, dark buds to blossoms and then to balls of pale, withered, petals that fell to the carpet one by one. It was unexpectedly moving watching them bloom and then perish so quickly, like the piercingly lovely flowers in a vanitas painting.
The lessons of these paintings had hitherto been lost on me, perhaps because I was just too young. They say, Time moves forward and takes all things. While some of the still-lives are hopelessly didactic, incorporating skulls and bones, all have a rich physicality that invites sensual participation. They caution against the world and then lure us into it. Pleasures is fleeting, they seem to say, so take it while it is there.