SCHOOTEN, Floris Gerritsz. van - b. ~1590 Haarlem, d. ~1655 Haarlem - WGA

SCHOOTEN, Floris Gerritsz. van

(b. ~1590 Haarlem, d. ~1655 Haarlem)

Dutch painter. His considerable output of still-life paintings covers a variety of styles and formats reflecting different influences. His large market or kitchen scenes, with or without figures, showing an abundance of produce (e.g. 1634; Brunswick, Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum), clearly belong to the tradition of Pieter Aertsen and Joachim Beuckelaer. Van Schooten’s breakfast-pieces, with an accumulation of items on a table top, tilted towards the spectator and covered with rugs or white damask cloths, are often inseparable from those of his Haarlem contemporaries Nicholaes Gillis and Floris van Dijck. These horizontal panels, with cheese, hams, bread, all on separate pewter or porcelain plates, with vertical accents from tankards, salt-cellars and wine glasses, gradually evolved towards smaller-scale still-lifes with simplified content (e.g. Haarlem, Frans Halsmuseum). This signals a transition from his early style towards that of the younger Haarlem masters of the monochrome breakfast-pieces, Pieter Claesz. and Willem Heda.

Van Schooten’s later work often focuses on fruit, whether a bowl of plums or a basket of grapes, with cherries or berries on small plates arranged in a diagonal across a table top. A pewter beaker with punched decoration frequently appears in these simplified compositions. These works are pleasing, but the mood is mundane, and they lack the dignity and grandeur of Claesz. and Heda and of van Schooten’s own earlier breakfast-pieces. The artist’s practice of signing his work with a small monogram, often tucked away on a knife blade or dish edge, has contributed to the tendency for his pictures to be attributed to others, something often found with the work of an artist of widely varying formats and uneven quality.

Breakfast
Breakfast by

Breakfast

Paintings of food laid out on a table was popular from the beginning of the 17th century. Floris van Schooten was an early specialist of this category. He, as well as other specialists like Floris van Dijck (1575-1651) and Nicolaes Gillis (active c. 1610-30), worked at Haarlem, but interest in this subject was not confined to Haarlem, or indeed to painters working in Holland. In every country of Europe, early Baroque artists reacted more spontaneously to the visual world than their predecessors did, and there are Flemish, French, German, Spanish, and Italian still-life painters who share the stylistic and iconographic features found in Floris van Schooten.

Kitchen Still-Life
Kitchen Still-Life by

Kitchen Still-Life

This painting represents a kitchen still-life with a cauliflower, an artichoke, a ham and pots, pans and jugs, all on a wooden table with a basket underneath and a maid preparing fish. It is signed with monogram lower centre: FVS.

Larder Still-Life
Larder Still-Life by

Larder Still-Life

Van Schooten’s earliest works typically show a laden table with two figures to the left, and a view through an opening to another room, or as here, to a landscape. The composition of these pictures derives from a pictorial scheme going back to Joachim Beuckelaer in the previous century, and taken up in Antwerp by Frans Snyders in his earliest works.

This picture shows a larder still-life, with farmyard fowl, a turkey, pigeons, a plover, duck, a starling, partridge and snipe, with game and songbirds and rabbits suspended from nails, a rib of beef, grapes and an artichoke, with copper pans, watched by a couple seated at the end of a table, a landscape visible through an embrasure. It is signed with initials and dated on the table-edge lower right: F.V.S. 1621.

Still-Life
Still-Life by

Still-Life

On a white napkin are various objects, including a Chinese dish with butter, a ham with cloves, a sausage and two cheeses. The colours are sober, the point of view is low and the objects are placed in a diagonal arrangement.

Still-Life
Still-Life by

Still-Life

This painting depicts a still-life of cheese, a silver beaker, bread on a pewter dish, butter in a blue-and-white bowl, together with red- and white-currants, a knife and biscuits on a table draped with a green cloth.

Still-Life of Fruit
Still-Life of Fruit by

Still-Life of Fruit

The painting represents a still-life with grapes, logan berries, plums, an apple and a glass together on a table. The wine glass appears to have been added by a later hand.

Still-Life of Fruit and Cheese
Still-Life of Fruit and Cheese by

Still-Life of Fruit and Cheese

Still-Life with Fruits in Delft Porcelain
Still-Life with Fruits in Delft Porcelain by

Still-Life with Fruits in Delft Porcelain

Still-Life with Glass, Cheese, Butter and Cake
Still-Life with Glass, Cheese, Butter and Cake by

Still-Life with Glass, Cheese, Butter and Cake

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