The Attributes of the Arts and the Rewards Which Are Accorded Them
On View In:
Gallery 306
Artist:   Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin  
Title:   The Attributes of the Arts and the Rewards Which Are Accorded Them  
Date:   1766  
Medium:   Oil on canvas  
Dimensions:   44 1/2 x 57 1/4 in. (113.03 x 145.42 cm) (canvas) 57 3/4 x 71 x 5 1/8 in. (146.69 x 180.34 x 13.02 cm) (outer frame)  
Credit Line:   The William Hood Dunwoody Fund  
Location:   Gallery 306  

This picture may appear to reproduce the casual clutter of an 18th-century tabletop. Not so. Chardin carefully selected objects to convey specific meanings. A palette with brushes, placed atop a paint box, symbolizes the art of painting. Building plans, spread beneath drafting and surveying tools, represent architecture. An ornate bronze pitcher alludes to goldsmithing, and the red portfolio symbolizes drawing. The plaster model of J. B. Pigalle's Mercury, an actual work by a friend of Chardin's, stands for sculpture. The cross on a ribbon is the Order of Saint Michael, the highest honor an artist could then receive. Pigalle was the first sculptor to win it. So this painting sends multiple messages: it presents emblems of the arts and of artists' glory and honors a specific artist, Pigalle. A still life (or painting of objects), which is composed from scratch by its creator, can be used to convey complex meanings.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Chardin, Jean-Baptiste-Siméon  
Nationality:   French  
Life Dates:   French, 1699 - 1779  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:   Signature and Date LL: [J.B. Chardin, 1766]  
Classification:   Paintings  
Physical Description:   Still life. Neoclassicism.  
Creation Place:   Europe, France, , ,  
Accession #:   52.15  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts