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The Kitchen Table

Jean Baptiste Siméon Chardin (French, 1699–1779)
17[55?]

Medium/Technique Oil on canvas
Dimensions 39.7 x 47.6 cm (15 5/8 x 18 3/4 in.)
Credit Line Gift of Mrs. Peter Chardon Brooks
Accession Number80.512
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsEurope
ClassificationsPaintings
This still life of humble kitchen wares, and another depicting elegant serving utensils, were exhibited as a pair at the Salon of 1757. Close examination reveals that Chardin changed the position of many objects as he painted, evidence of his painstaking craftsmanship and determination to create harmonious balance in what appear to be casual groupings. The reworking of the mortar and pestle at the right is most apparent to the naked eye.

Signed Lower right: Chardin / 17[55?]
Provenance1757, Ange-Laurent de La Live de Jully (b. 1725 - d. 1770), Paris (probably original commission) [see note 1]. By 1779, Johann Anton de Peters (b. 1725 - d. 1795), Cologne and Paris; March 9, 1779, Peters sale, Remy and Basan, Paris, lot 104 (bought in for 130.1 livres) [see note 2]; by descent to Mme. Johann Anton (Elisabeth Marie Gouel de Villebrune) de Peters (b. 1738 - d. 1785), Paris; November 9, 1787, Mme. de Peters estate sale, Le Brun, Paris, lot 165 (bought in for 98 livres). May 2, 1791, du Charteaux estate and others sale, Le Brun, Paris, lot 146, to Sollier for Pierre Remy (b. 1715 - d. 1797), Paris, for 100 livres. Cesar-Louis-Marie Villeminot (b. 1749 - d. 1807), Paris; May 25, 1807, posthumous Villeminot sale, Paillet, Paris, lot 13, to Pierre-Joseph Renoult (b. 1760), Paris, for 23.95 francs. Peter Chardon Brooks (b. 1798 - d. 1880), Boston; by inheritance to Mrs. Peter Chardon (Susan Oliver Heard) Brooks (b. 1806 - 1884), Boston; 1880, gift of Mrs. Peter Chardon Brooks to the MFA. (Accession date: October 16, 1880)

NOTES:
[1] La Live de Jully owned the painting at the time of the 1757 Salon, where it was exhibited (no. 33). The 1791 Le Brun auction catalogue indicates that the painting and its companion piece "were made with care for Juli de La Live." See Pierre Rosenberg, "Chardin 1699-1779" (Cleveland, 1979), p. 305. [2] From 1779 to 1807, the painting was sold in the same lot as its companion piece, "Butler's Pantry Table" by Chardin, with the exception of the 1787 de Peters estate sale, when it was sold alone. See Eric M. Zafran, "French Paintings in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston" (Boston, 1998), pp. 94-97.