AIDJPGM.54.PA.1}~
OTYPaintings}~
OTG}~
OTNStill Life with Ewer, Vessels and Pomegranate}~
MET103.5 x 81.2 cm}~
MEG}~
MCMoverall}~
MEDheight}~
MDV103.5}~
MDUcm}~
MEG}~
MCMoverall}~
MEDwidth}~
MDV81.2}~
MDUcm}~
OMG}~
OMDOil on canvas}~
CRG}~
CIDULAN: 10439}~
CRTWillem Kalf}~
CRNKalf, Willem}~
CRCDutch}~
OCG}~
OCTMid 1640s}~
OCS1643}~
OCE1647}~
CXG}~
CXDLuxury objects, such as the ornate Mannerist ewer, steeple cup, and
elegant glass vessels, are carefully arranged on a table in this Dutch
still life. An open pomegranate and a bowl of fruit rest on white drapery.
To the right, a lemon and three olives are reflected in a silver plate
that rests precariously on the table’s edge. Behind this, a platter holds
a tankard whose elaborate polished surface reflects the adjacent wineglass.
Light falls from the left, playing across these precious objects and causing
them to glitter and shine.Willem Kalf delighted in the play and contrast
of transparent and reflective surfaces: the finely wrought metal of the
ewer, the representation of smooth glass, the weave of the linen drapery,
the dry crumbly texture of the bread, and the wet, shiny insides of the
open pomegranate. At first glance, this still life implies an absence
of human presence. But a closer look reveals just the opposite. The torn
bread, half empty glass of wine, sliced fruit, and overturned glass allude
to human intervention, as if these lavish delicacies were abruptly left
on the table.}~
OOG}~
OONJ. Paul Getty Museum}~
OOPLos Angeles, California, USA}~
OOA54.PA.1}~
ORG}~
ORLhttp://www.getty.edu/legal/copyright.html}~
RIG}~
RIPY}~
RIDFull view}~
RIRHasFormat}~
RILJPGM.00052502.TIF}~
AVD20000621}~
AVV1.2}~
ALY1998}~
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Last modified on
October 10, 2001