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Still Life with a Pitcher and Smoking Paraphernalia Jan Jansz. van de Velde III

Artist

Jan Jansz. van de Velde III Haarlem, 1620 – Enkhuizen, 1662

Culture Netherlandish
Date after 1643
Object type painting
Medium, technique oil on oak
Dimensions

43.4 × 32.4 cm

Inventory number 190
Collection Old Master Paintings
On view Museum of Fine Arts, First Floor, European Art 1600–1700 and British Painting 1600–1800, Cabinet 9

By the early seventeenth century, smoking was widely enjoyed throughout the Netherlands, which provided subject matter for painters of genre pieces as well as still lifes. The tabakje, or tobacco still life, became fashionable from the 1620s onwards, and one of its most significant exponents was Jan van de Velde III, who came from a dynasty of painters in Haarlem. Although the harmful effects of smoking were entirely unknown at the time, the tobacco, the wick and the pipe appear in the painting together with the accoutrements of other sinful pleasures: playing cards, and a stoneware jug decorated with the coat of arms of Amsterdam. The carefully arranged composition, focusing on just a few objects and featuring a reduced palette, recalls the table still lifes of Pieter Claesz., while the tight cropping of the picture reminds us of the works of Jan Treck.

References

Pigler, Andor, Katalog der Galerie Alter Meister, 1-2. Museum der Bildenden Künste, Szépművészeti Múzeum, Budapest. 2, Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1967, p. 731.

This record is subject to revision due to ongoing research.

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