Annelies, White Tulips, and Anemones by Henri Matisse

Henri Matisse painted Annelies, White Tulips, and Anemones in 1944, a year before the end of World War II. The work betrays little of the personal turmoil Matisse and his sitter, Annelies Nelck, were experiencing. Annelies’s surroundings seem comfortable; it’s evening and she’s perusing a coffee table book. The room’s windows look out onto a small group of trees, and the sitter is framed by two beautiful vases of white tulips and anemones. Annelies meets the viewers’ gaze with a bemused directness.

In actuality, Annelies had just fled German-occupied Holland for the relative safety of her parents’ house in France. Pregnant, she made the excruciating choice to leave without her husband, Ernst Katan, whom she had met while studying art in Amsterdam. He was tragically killed by German occupying forces the same year Annelies posed for this painting.

Matisse, too, was in distress. He was struggling with health issues—diagnosed with intestinal cancer in 1941, he found himself reliant on a wheelchair and frequently bedbound. His children, son Pierre and daughter Marguerite, were involved in French Resistance efforts. Pierre, the owner of the Pierre Matisse Gallery in New York, worked to evacuate Jewish artists to the United States, holding the major exhibition Artists in Exile at his gallery in 1942. Marguerite, who worked directly with the French Resistance, was arrested and tortured by the Gestapo. She miraculously escaped while en route to the Ravensbrück concentration camp in Germany, surviving in the woods until rescued.

Understanding the turbulence of the times leads one to reconsider this painting. Is this simply a portrait of a woman in a room? Or has Matisse subtly addressed the horrors so many were experiencing? The answer is heartbreaking—and explicit when one considers the title. Flowers have been assigned symbolic meanings throughout history; white tulips are often used during funeral services to offer condolences, while anemones are known to represent death and forsaken love. Annelies, flanked by both, is surrounded by loss.

Matisse’s ability to convey beauty and hope, knowing the circumstances he and his model faced, is all the more remarkable.

Henri Matisse (French, 1869–1954), Annelies, White Tulips, and Anemones, 1944
Oil on canvas Gift of the Friends of the Academy, 1946 (376.1)