Umehara's 'Pumpkin' (1948) takes a couple of pumpkins and a few small fruits on a plain ground and treats it as a subject to demonstrate style and color. The two large pumpkins dominate the sheet. Their rounded, segmented bodies built not from the usual, local colour but from a dense weave of strokes: rust-orange, green, blue, and cream laid side by side across the ribs and hollows. Smaller fruits rest around them, casting soft grey shadows that settle the objects on the surface. From his Kyoto childhood, surrounded by the kimono trade his family worked in, he absorbed the bold designs and bright colours of traditional Japanese art, learning clarity of form and colour. From his study with Renoir in 1908, he took the techniques of Western oil painting and the freedom to expand on the conventional spatial arrangements of Japanese art. Pumpkin is where those inheritances meet: the Impressionistic brushstrokes and the fauvist colours come from his European training, while the clarity of form and colour belongs to the Japanese design sensibility he grew up with. That is also why the work reads as an image of essence rather than likeness. Umehara is not after realistic accuracy; he abstracts the pumpkins into texture and depth, letting the directional energy of the strokes and the play of colour carry the life of the objects. The humble vegetable becomes a vehicle for the qualities your sources associate with him — vibrant colour, dynamic brushstrokes, and a liberated handling of form.
In Pumpkin, Ryuzaburo masterfully fuses Western Fauvism with traditional Japanese aesthetic sensibilities, transforming a humble still-life subject into a vibrant explosion of color and form. Through bold, expressive brushstrokes and rich pigments, the artwork celebrates the raw, grounded vitality of nature, reflecting the artist's unique ability to find dynamic beauty in the everyday.