Peploe and Cadell had met in Edinburgh by 1909 and both received their second solo exhibitions at The Scottish Gallery in the capital the following year. They stayed in touch during Peploe’s sojourn in Paris from 1910 until 1912 and whilst Cadell saw active service during World War One. Following his demobilisation in 1919, Cadell moved to 6 Ainslie Place in Edinburgh’s New Town, a few minutes’ walk from Peploe’s home at 13 India Street and studio at 54 Shandwick Place.
The artists’ friendship intensified and their working relationship became closer. Still Life with Fruit and Flowers shows how they even shared a taste for props, such as the orange-rimmed plate, be-ribboned black fan and blue-glazed jug, the likes of which also appeared in Cadell’s contemporary paintings. The stunning lilac background which is such a feature of the present work is surely a direct reference to the colour with which Cadell painted the first floor at Ainslie Place.
As T. J. Honeyman recorded: “Cadell’s studio was about the only one S. J. [sic] ever visited. They often criticised each other’s work, suggesting an improvement here and there, counselling eliminations of some passage or advising a fresh attempt.” (T. J. Honeyman, Three Scottish Colourists, London, 1950, p.66)
The still life genre was of the utmost important to Peploe throughout his career. He first emerged as an artist of importance at his inaugural solo exhibition in 1903 with a series of still lifes realised in thick, creamy paint, set before a dark background and full of implied narratives of a sophisticated lifestyle. The time he spent in Paris before the War changed his work dramatically, as he submerged himself in the very latest developments in French art, from Cubism to Fauvism. With a medical exemption from war service, Peploe used the years of the conflict for development and exploration, including of the work of Paul Cézanne.
Elizabeth Cumming has explained the importance of Peploe’s post-war still lifes, writing: