Still Life with Pitcher, Candle, and Books

John Frederick Peto (ca. 1900)

Do you read online or prefer turning the pages of a book?

In this picture, Peto returned to his favored allegorical subject of books in various states of disarray and decay. One book stands and catches a ray of direct light, only to reveal its peeling, wordless spine; the back cover of another thick and stubby volume literally and figuratively hangs by a thread. The Industrial Revolution was well underway when Peto painted this scene—these neglected objects are shown as remnants of a bygone past left behind in the wake of progress.

\ Artist

John Frederick Peto

American
Born:
1854
Died:
1907
Death place:
Island Heights, New Jersey

John Frederick Peto often relished ambiguity, which was made more puzzling by the conventions of trompe l'oeil (or “fool the eye”) painting, a specialized form of still life popular in America at the end of the 19th century. Works in this style are designed to be elaborate visual deceptions that viewers will mistake for actual three-dimensional tableaux.

\ About

Medium

Oil on canvas

Credit

Museum purchase, gift of the M.H. de Young Museum Society and the Patrons of Art and Music