On view

Cross-Collections Gallery

Still Life with Watermelon,

1865

Rubens Peale, 1784–1865; born and died Philadelphia, PA
2007-20
Still Life with Watermelon presents an arrangement of fruit illuminated by a light source beyond the frame. A cluster of grapes hangs over the table’s edge, casting a subtle shadow and giving depth to the otherwise friezelike composition. One of many artistic children in the Peale family, Rubens Peale had poor eyesight and thus did not receive instruction in painting from his father, Charles Willson Peale. Instead, Rubens was tasked with managing Peale’s Museum, the public display of art and natural history specimens that the elder Peale founded in Philadelphia in 1784. Rubens was taught to paint only later, at the age of seventy-one, by his daughter, Mary. The still-life paintings that he produced in the final decade of his life hearken back to the clear, balanced, and understated Neoclassical paintings created earlier in the nineteenth century by his uncle,
James Peale, and brother Raphaelle.

More Context

Handbook Entry

Information

Title
Still Life with Watermelon
Dates

1865

Maker
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
48.3 × 69.9 cm (19 × 27 1/2 in.) frame: 67 × 87.3 × 9.8 cm (26 3/8 × 34 3/8 × 3 7/8 in.)
Credit Line
Gift in honor of Professor John Wilmerding from his friends and former students and the Kathleen C. Sherrerd Fund for Acquisitions in American Art
Object Number
2007-20
Signatures
Signed and dated, bottom right: Rubens Peale 1865
Inscription
Signed, dated, and inscribed on verso: Rubens Peale / 81 Years of Age / May [illeg.] 1865
Culture
Materials

George Patterson, son of the artist; by descent to his son, Frederick Geer Patterson; by descent to his son, George Patterson; by descent to his son, Charles Adam Patterson; by descent to his daughter, Janet Geer Patterson Uhle, 1971; by descent to her son, Alexander A. Uhle, 1988 [1]. [Spanierman Gallery, LLC, New York (NY), by December, 2006]; purchased from the above and donated to the Princeton University Art Museum by friends and former students of Professor John Wilderding and the Kathleen C. Sherrerd Fund for Acquisitions in American Art, 2007. [1] The provenance until this point has been reconstructed by Spanierman Gallery.