Still Life with a Crown of Flowers, Tazza, Jewelry Box, Watch, and Vase of Flowers (Primary Title)

Jan Brueghel the Younger, Flemish, active in England, 1561 - 1635 (Artist)
Jan Brueghel, the Elder, Flemish, 1568 - 1625 (Artist)

ca. 1620
Flemish
Oil on panel
Unframed: 18 3/4 in. x 26 1/4 in. Framed: 26 1/8 x 33 1/2 x 3 in.
L2020.6.5
From an early age, Jan Brueghel the Younger assisted his father with commissions in his Antwerp workshop. This opulent still life was one of the final collaborations between father and son, completed shortly before the younger Brueghel departed for Italy in the early 1620s. Certain motifs in the painting show evidence of their different hands at work. The modeling of the glass vase is somewhat less refined than that of the ornate gilt tazza—which was commonly used for wine or delicacies such as candied fruit—and the flowers that crown it. Flowers were Brueghel the Elder’s specialty, and the kind of exquisitely delicate brushwork employed here to render the wreath earned him the nickname “the velvet Brueghel.” Other paintings from the Brueghel workshop included flowers from different seasons, jewelry, and other luxurious items, and their combination was intended to evoke the question of whether the beauty of God’s creation surpassed the finest works made by human artifice.
The Jordan and Thomas A. Saunders III Collection

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