The Silver Tureen

The Silver Tureen by Jean Siméon Chardin

Medium

Oil on canvas

Dimensions

30 x 42 1/2 in. (76.2 x 108 cm)

Classification

Paintings

Department

European Paintings

Museum

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

Fletcher Fund, 1959

Accession Number

59.9

Tags

BirdsApplesRabbitsStill LifeFruitCats

About this artwork

This masterful still life marks Jean Siméon Chardin's brilliant emergence as eighteenth-century France's preeminent painter of the genre. Created around 1728-1730, shortly after his admission to the French Royal Academy in 1728, the painting announces the arrival of an artist who would transform still life from decorative exercise into profound meditation on material existence. The substantial composition contrasts living and dead, raw and cooked: a supple, crouching cat provides vital energy ag...

Art Historical Context

Jean Siméon Chardin'sThe Silver Tureen*ca. 1728–30) is a landmark still life in oil on canvas, marking the artist's rise as eighteenth-century France's master of the genre. Painted shortly after his 1728 admission to the Royal Academy, it elevates everyday objects into profound symbols of life and materiality. Measuring 30 x 42½ inches, this work from the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings collection a harmonious arrangement of fruits like apples and oranges, a dead hare and partridge, and a lively crouching cat—juxtaposing vitality against stillness, raw against cooked. Chardin'...

About the Artist

Jean Siméon Chardin · 16991779

Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin, born on November 2, 1699, in Paris to a cabinetmaker father who crafted billiard tables, grew up immersed in the city's artisan world on the Left Bank near Saint-Sulpice. His early training came through apprenticeships with the history painters Pierre-Jacques Cazes, where he honed academic drawing techniques, and Noël-Nicolas Coypel, whose assignment to copy a musket ...

    Send Feedback