Title: Oil Painting On Canvas Still Life with Apples and Yellow Flowers
Shipping: $29.00
Artist: N/A
Period: 20th Century
History: N/A
Origin: N/A
Condition: Very Good
Item Date: 1950 to 1990
Item ID: 6340
Still Life with Apples and Yellow Flowers." Oil on canvas. Signed "OK" lower left, and on verso. Image size 13-3/4"H x 19-3/4"W, in a contemporary frame with canvas liner and gilt fillet overall. *All of the art is edited and chosen by us for its high quality and workmanship before posting. These collectibles have been selected with the artist & collector in mind. We are committed to enhancing our customer’s lives by discovering creating, and pointing out only the best art we can find in the world today. We Are Taste-Makers, Art Advisers, Consultants & Publishers Of Spectacular Art Stories. Our job is to be intermediaries between buyers and sellers. We are vetting for high end art patrons. We are determined to catalog the world's most exceptional art and share it with everyone.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Still_life
A still life (plural still lifes) is a work of art depicting mostly inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects which may be either natural (food, flowers, dead animals, plants, rocks, or shells) or man-made (drinking glasses, books, vases, jewelry, coins, pipes, and so on). With origins in the Middle Ages and Ancient Graeco-Roman art, still-life painting emerged as a distinct genre and professional specialization in Western painting by the late 16th century, and has remained significant since then. Still life gives the artist more freedom in the arrangement of elements within a composition than do paintings of other types of subjects such as landscape or portraiture. Still-life paintings, particularly before 1700, often contained religious and allegorical symbolism relating to the objects depicted. Some modern still life breaks the two-dimensional barrier and employs three-dimensional mixed media, and uses found objects, photography, computer graphics, as well as video and sound. Still life emerged from the painting of details in larger compositions with subjects, and continued to often be combined with figure subjects, especially in Flemish Baroque painting. The term includes the painting of dead animals, especially game, but live ones are considered animal art, although that was in practice often painted from dead models. The still-life category also shades into zoological and especially botanical illustration, where there was a considerable overlap among artists; generally a still life should include a fully depicted background, and have aesthetic rather than illustrative concerns as primary. Still life occupied the lowest rung of the hierarchy of genres, but was extremely popular with buyers. As well as the independent still-life subject, still-life painting encompasses other types of painting with prominent still-life elements, usually symbolic, and "images that rely on a multitude of still-life elements ostensibly to reproduce a 'slice of life'. The trompe-lil painting, which intends to deceive the viewer into thinking the scene is real, is a specialized type of still life, usually showing inanimate and relatively flat objects.