On view
Attributes of the Architect,
ca. 1725–27
More Context
Handbook Entry
Chardin practiced an art form that, by tradition, was not of a high rank: in the academic hierarchy, still life was placed lower than history painting, portraiture, genre scenes, or even animal painting. Parisian by birth and at first apprenticed to history painters, Chardin found a vocation in the humble genre of still-life painting, although he also painted figural scenes of contemporary life, combining children or kitchen maids with still-life elements. As Chardin rose from shop-sign painter to member of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture (where he was admitted to the ranks as a painter of still life in 1728), he gained the admiration of artists and collectors, and even the art critic Denis Diderot, who considered him a genius. These paintings, probably a pair of overdoors for a small study, testify to Chardin’s preternatural powers of observation and ability to render different substances in paint. They also are moral portraits of the owners of the tools, the artist and the architect. It has been noted that the dabs of paint on the palette are the colors used in the painting, as if the artist were providing a glimpse of his working practice. <em>Attributes of the Painter</em> includes a further wry, self-referential element in the small sculpture, which Jennifer Montagu has identified as a model by François Duquesnoy for the executioner holding up the head of John the Baptist in a sculpted tableau of the martyrdom of Chardin’s patron saint.
Information
ca. 1725–27
Europe, France
- Exposition Chardin et Fragonard organisée par le Comité Chardin et Fragonard et la revue "L’Art et les artistes", (Paris: Galerie Georges Petit, 1907)., no. 12, 13
- Jean Guiffrey, Catalogue raisonné de l’œuvre peint et dessiné de J.-B. Siméon Chardin: suivi de la liste des gravures exécutées d’après ses ouvraves, (Paris: Piazza et cie, 1907)., no. 122
- Herbert Furst, Chardin, (London: Methuen & Co., 1911)., pg. 124
- Catalogue de tableaux anciens, dessins, miniatures, sculptures, (Paris: Galerie Georges Petit, 1919)., no. 6
- Georges Wildenstein, Chardin, (Paris: Les Beaux-arts, édition d’études et de documents, 1933)., no. 1135, 1136
- "Notes: The Museum of Historic Art", Bulletin of the Department of Art and Archaeology, (Jun., 1935): p. 17-19., p. 19
- Chardin and the modern still life: Marie Harriman Gallery: November, 1936, (New York: Marie Harriman Gallery, 1936)., no. 2, 3
- French still life from Chardin to Cezanne: loan exhibition for the benefit of the Quaker Emergency Service, Oct. 29 - Nov. 22, 1947, Arnold Seligmann-Helft Galleries, (New York: Arnold Seligmann-Helft Galleries, 1947)., no. 18
- History of still life and flower painting, (Montclair, NJ: Montclair Art Museum, 1948)., no. 2, 3
- Old masters: 100 years of painting: French, English and American paintings from the mid-18th century: February 7 thru March 2, 1952, (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse Museum of Fine Arts, 1952)., no. 1
- William George, The painter’s workshop, (London; New York: Oxford University Press, 1954)., p. 23, 25, 27; pl. 2
- John D. Morse, Old Masters in America: a comprehensive guide; more than two-thousand paintings in United States and Canada by forty famous artists, (Chicago: Rand McNally, 1955)., p. 87
- F. Schmid, "The painter's implements in eighteenth-century art", Burlington magazine 108, no. 763 (Oct., 1966): p. 519-521., p. 519
- Pierre Rosenberg, Chardin, 1699-1779: a special exhibition organized by the Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Paris, the Cleveland Museum of Art, and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, (Cleveland, OH: Cleveland Museum of Art, 1979)., no. 32
- Pierre Rosenberg, Chardin: new thoughts, (Lawrence, KS: Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, 1983)., p. 21, fig. 11
- Pierre Rosenberg, L'opera completa di Chardin, (Milano: Rizzoli, 1983)., p. 71, no. 8 (illus.)
- Allen Rosenbaum and Francis F. Jones, Selections from The Art Museum, Princeton University, (Princeton, NJ: The Art Museum, Princeton University, 1986), p. 252 (illus.)
- Pierre Rosenberg, Chardin: suivi du catalogue des oeuvres, (Paris: Flammarion, 1999)., p. 193, no. 8
- Philippe Cros, Chardin, (Paris : Adam Biro, 1999)., p. 25 (illus.)
- Old master paintings: New York Wednesday, June 5, 2002, (New York: Sotheby's, 2001)., no. 106 (Lot 94)
- Martha Frick Symington, Helen Clay Frick: bittersweet heiress, (Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2008)., p. 240 (illus.)
- Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collections (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Art Museum, 2013), p. 121