Monday, March 16, 2026

Produce

Juan Sánchez Cotán
Bodegón of Vegetables
before 1627
oil on canvas
Museo de Bellas Artes de Granada


Jacques Linard
Still Life with Fruit
ca. 1630
oil on panel
Musée Saint-Loup, Troyes

Tomás Yepes
Still Life with Bowl of Fruit
ca. 1645
oil on canvas
Museo de Bellas Artes de Valencia

Henri-Horace Roland de la Porte
Still Life
ca. 1765
oil on canvas
Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California

Helene Schjerfbeck
Still Life with Onions
1885
oil on canvas
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Meyer Isaac de Haan
Still Life with Apples
ca. 1890
oil on canvas
Indianapolis Museum of Art

Anonymous German Manufacturer
Trellis with Grapes
ca. 1900
printed, embossed and die-cut wallpaper border
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Samuel John Peploe
Still LIfe - Apples and Jar
ca. 1912-16
oil on canvas
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney

Edward Weston
Cabbage Leaf
1931
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Martin Sharp
Apple
ca. 1972
lithograph
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Olivia Parker
Bosc
1977
gelatin silver print
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Lee Guilliatt
Beets
1978
watercolor on paper
New Britain Museum of American Art, Connecticut

Ron Geibert
Vegetables, Seward County Fair, Seward, Nebraska
1980
gelatin silver print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Joel-Peter Witkin
Angel of the Carrots
1981
gelatin silver print
Art Institute of Chicago

William Scharf
Vegetable Sphinx
1982
acrylic on paper
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

James Casebere
Golden Apple
1986
gelatin silver print
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

16 September 1943 

    I seem to have spent a great deal of my childhood in prison – other people's prisons.  The Black Tulip prison, the French Revolution prisons, the Spanish Inquisition prisons.  And the horror of those prisons was so real to me that I often look back and vaguely remember the straw, the filthy food, the oozing walls and the toads on the floor, as if I were really once in that situation.  Whenever I hear about prisons I seem to imagine that I have experienced confinement myself. 

3 August 1945

    Later when we climbed to the top of the common and saw below us all the roof tops, the faked copper-green domes of the Opera House cinema, and, nearer, the huge frog-shaped rocks squatting in the hay-like grass, and the little human bodies sprawled out in the sun, or sitting guardedly on the benches, I had a love for Tunbridge Wells and I wished that the Pantiles and the charming things remaining could be cared for and not ignored, degraded and destroyed.    
    But it is a truth that goes much deeper than we know, that men feel it indecent in some way to lavish care on things that never can be replaced.  If a precious thing should get broken, there will be many people who in secret will sigh with relief. 

– from The Journals of Denton Welch (who was born in 1915, gravely injured in 1935, then wrote the journals between 1942 and his early death in 1948), edited by Michael De-la-Noy (1984)