ArtworkStatus unknown

Seventeenth-Century Interior

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oil paint (paint)71 × 94 Cm

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About the artwork
Artist supplied description.

Chicagoan Charles Gifford Dyer studied painting in Paris and Munich. The objects depicted in this canvas, such as the Chinese blue-and-white vase and Oushak Turkish lotto rug, were likely collected during his extensive travels and represent the tastes of a worldly, wealthy man. The painting recalls 17th-century Dutch compositions in its focus on surfaces, textures, and illusionism. Like moralistic Dutch still life paintings, it evokes the fleetingness of life (vanitas) by juxtaposing objects that quickly decay, such as fruit and flowers, with the enduring arts of literature and music. The crisscross pattern of the parquet floor and the draped rug create spatial depth, offering a portrait of the Gilded Age, a time when an expanding economy encouraged the rich to collect such treasures.

Artwork metadata
Structured fields synced from connected systems.
Mediumoil paint (paint)
Dimensions71 × 94 Cm
CertificateCertificate not provided
Timeline
Chain of custody, exhibitions, and verification milestones synced from the provenance service.
Fri
30
Jan
note

Art Institute of Chicago, Museum Studies, "The Silk Road and Beyond: Travel, Trade, and Transformation," 33, 1

Art Institute of Chicago, Museum Studies, "The Silk Road and Beyond: Travel, Trade, and Transformation," 33, 1 (2007) fig. 8.
Fri
30
Jan
exhibition

Art Institute of Chicago, The Silk Road and Beyond, Sept. 30, 2006–Mar. 30, 2007, no cat.

Art Institute of Chicago, The Silk Road and Beyond, Sept. 30, 2006–Mar. 30, 2007, no cat.
Fri
30
Jan
exhibition

Wisconsin, Beloit College, for long–term loan, 1926–1950.

Wisconsin, Beloit College, for long–term loan, 1926–1950.
© Artist-Unknown. All rights reserved.