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Perhaps inspired by a Friday-night Jewish Sabbath supper, this early still-life was painted during Gertler’s brief training at the Regent Street Polytechnic (1906–1908). It relates closely to the 'Study of a Still Life' in the National Gallery, signed ‘Chardin. 1754’, but now recognised as by a nineteenth-century imitator. It was painted at a time when Gertler greatly admired the old masters of Dutch realism, and its later followers including Jean-Simeon Chardin, and began to ‘haunt’ the rooms of the National Gallery, crafting his own pictures in their image. These simple kitchen scenes appealed to Gertler because of their familiarity. These were the objects he found in his mother’s kitchen (where he had his first studio) and their close relationship is also reflected here.
Title
Still Life with a Bottle of Benedictine
Date
1908
Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
H 41 x W 48 cm
Accession number
1987-114
Acquisition method
on permanent loan from Mrs L. J. Morris
Work type
Painting
Inscription description
M. Gertler 1908