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Still Life with Melon and Pears

Luis Meléndez (Spanish, 1716–1780)
about 1772

Medium/Technique Oil on canvas
Dimensions 63.8 x 85.1 cm (25 1/8 x 33 1/2 in.)
Credit Line Margaret Curry Wyman Fund
Accession Number39.41
CollectionsEurope
ClassificationsPaintings
Meléndez favored arrangements of everyday objects painted with sober yet sensuous realism. He savored shapes, surfaces, and colors—from the webbed rind of the melon to the glint of a wine bottle cooling in a cork bucket—and despite the profusion of objects, his paintings convey a satisfying sense of balance and measure. This still life may be from a series of forty-five, said to represent “every species of food produced in Spain,” that Meléndez created for the king’s summer residence outside Madrid. Ironically, many were painted at a time when poor harvests had produced severe food shortages. The artist himself had no money to buy food, claiming that his brush was his only asset.

InscriptionsLower right, on edge of table: EG L M D. S. P.
ProvenanceR.F. Ratcliff, England [see note 1]. Possibly Mrs. Olga Bode Matthiesen [see note 2]. By 1938, Matthiesen Ltd., London; 1939, sold by Matthiesen to the MFA for $300. (Accession Date: February 9, 1939)

NOTES:
[1] Eleanor Tufts, "Luis Meléndez: Eighteenth-Century master of the Spanish Still Life with a Catalogue Raisonné (Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 1985), 92-93, cat. no. 59.

[2] According to information provided by the Matthiesen Gallery (December 1, 2005).