Probably by Jan Fyt, 'A Still Life with Fruit, Dead Game and a Parrot', late 1640s
Full title | A Still Life with Fruit, Dead Game and a Parrot |
---|---|
Artist | Probably by Jan Fyt |
Artist dates | 1611 - 1661 |
Date made | late 1640s |
Medium and support | oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 84.7 × 113.4 cm |
Acquisition credit | Bequeathed by Claude Dickason Rotch, 1962 |
Inventory number | NG6335 |
Location | Not on display |
Collection | Main Collection |
A hare’s carcass hangs from a fixing on a wall, a wound bloodying its soft, furry stomach. Its untethered leg flops lifelessly toward an overflowing basket of fruit, below which three dead birds – a brace of partridges and a jay – are displayed top-to-tail. A precious blue and white porcelain bowl containing strawberries is nestled in the pile of apricots, pears, peaches, plums and grapes, over which perches an African grey parrot. The bird playfully pinches a strand of the grape vine in its beak.
Although rather coarser than his usual work, the painting is probably by Jan Fyt, a Flemish still life, animal and flower painter. The artist has created a composition of opposites placed side by side: of flora and fauna, and of life and death. Though the exotic parrot, presumably a pet, is alive and well, we are reminded that it will eventually meet the same end as the game strung up and piled unceremoniously near it.
A hare’s carcass hangs from a fixing on a wall, a wound bloodying its soft, furry stomach. Its untethered leg flops lifelessly toward an overflowing basket of fruit, below which three dead birds – a brace of partridges and a jay – are displayed top-to-tail. A precious blue and white porcelain bowl containing strawberries is nestled in the pile of apricots, pears, peaches, plums and grapes, over which perches an African grey parrot. The bird playfully pinches a strand of the grape vine in its beak.
Although rather coarser than his usual work, the painting is probably by Jan Fyt, a Flemish still life, animal and flower painter. The artist has created a composition of opposites placed side by side: of flora and fauna, and of life and death. Though the exotic parrot, presumably a pet, is alive and well, we are reminded that it will eventually meet the same end as the game strung up and piled unceremoniously near it. This contrast is continued in the colour scheme of the blood red velvet table cover and the pure white cloth. Furthermore, the juicy claret-coloured grapes are given a prominent position on the same horizontal plane as the hare’s bleeding wound, possibly a reference to the Eucharist and the blood of Christ.
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