Morangos Silvestres e um Cravo em uma Tigela Wan-Li (Wild Strawberries and a Carnation in a Wan-Li Bowl) - Jacob van Hulsdonck
National Gallery of Art Washington D.C. Estados Unidos
Óleo sobre painel de cobre - 28x36 - 1620
Jacob van Hulsdonck drew much of his artistic inspiration from
Jan Breughel the Elder (1568–1625) in Antwerp and Ambrosius Bosschaert the
Elder (1573–1621) in Middelburg, yet he painted with a clarity of form and
composition quite different from either of these masters. This small and
exquisite painting, executed on copper, captures the very best qualities of Van
Hulsdonck's work. Set atop a plain wooden table, a beautifully articulated
Wan-Li bowl is filled with wild strawberries and adorned by a single carnation,
dramatically silhouetted against a dark background. This unexpected element
adds tension to the visually simple yet luscious composition. The cherries, red
and white currants, and random water droplets arrayed on the table form a
pattern of circles that echo the round forms of the strawberries and the bowl.
The droplets reinforce the still life's sense of fleeting freshness, and the
transience of the moment is heightened by the presence of the delicate
butterfly that has just alighted on a leaf and by the fly feasting on a berry.
Though simple in its composition, this striking image captures the viewer's attention
with its bold color contrasts and delicacy of execution.
This work beautifully complements the other early 17th-century
still lifes in the Dutch cabinet galleries, particularly the fruit and flower
pendants by Balthasar van der Ast (1593/1594–1657), an artist greatly
influenced by Hulsdonck's paintings.

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