Artwork Page for Gooseberries on a Table

Details / Information for Gooseberries on a Table

Gooseberries on a Table

1701
(Dutch, 1660–1707)
Measurements
Framed: 45.5 x 38.5 x 4.5 cm (17 15/16 x 15 3/16 x 1 3/4 in.); Unframed: 29.7 x 22.8 cm (11 11/16 x 9 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Description

Coorte worked in Middelburg, a wealthy maritime city in the southern part of the Netherlands that fostered a poetic, scientific, and spiritual examination of the natural world. Gooseberries—a modest, local pleasure—could be picked in the wild, although Dutch gardeners in the 1600s were the first to cultivate them to improve their taste. The strong illumination gives the plant a stark grandeur, despite the small scale, and the dark background emphasizes the fruit's delicate translucency. The dessicated flower petals and waxy leaves contrast with the succulent gooseberries, with their skin on the verge of bursting.
A vertically oriented oil painting in deep browns depicts translucent gooseberries in pink, red, and pale green on a gray stone ledge. Rising from the center, a thorny branch with dark green leaves sprouts upwards. Scattered across the stone surface, the berries sit near a vertical crack. On the ledge's front to our left, the name "A. Coorte" and the year 1701 are inscribed within a decorative flourish.

Gooseberries on a Table

1701

Adriaen Coorte

(Dutch, 1660–1707)
Netherlands, early 18th Century

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