Still Life with Fruit

James Peale (ca. 1821)

Which of the senses does this painting evoke?

This painting, typical of the growing taste for fruit still lifes during the 1820s–1830s, offers a palette of contrasting colors displayed in peaches, pears, and multiple varieties of grapes. Some of the fruits sit in a bowl; others seem to spill across the surface of a table. The microscopic attention to detail shows Peale’s background as a painter of miniatures and a student of the natural sciences.

\ Artist

James Peale

American
Born:
1749
Died:
1831
Death place:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

James Peale came from one of America’s first artistic families. He served in the Continental army during the American Revolution; after the war he settled in Philadelphia, where he became an accomplished painter of portrait miniatures. When his eyesight began to fail around 1810, he began painting larger portraits, landscapes, and realistic and intimate still lifes.

\ About

Medium

Oil on panel

Credit

Museum purchase, M. H. de Young Memorial Museum