Zurbarán - Still Life Painting and the Spanish Baroque - Exhibition Poster
PosterAn exhibition poster for Francisco de Zurbarán's still life paintings, bringing together the small and remarkable body of work in which the great Spanish Baroque master turned his attention from monks and martyrs to the quiet drama of objects on a table. Zurbarán (1598–1664) is known principally for the austere religious paintings he produced for Spanish monasteries and churches - the kneeling Franciscans, the Dominican saints, the Carthusian altarpieces - but across his career he also painted a small number of still lifes that rank among the most admired in the European tradition. Fewer than a dozen are securely attributed to him, and they carry the same severity of vision as his devotional work: objects placed against a dark ground, modelled by a single directed light, arranged with the stillness of a liturgical rite. The Spanish bodegón under Zurbarán's hand becomes something closer to meditation than description. The poster pairs two of the most significant examples. Above is Still Life with Pots (c. 1650, Museo del Prado), in which a gilded silver goblet, two white Triana water jugs, and a red vase from the Indies are set in a linear frieze across a wooden surface. Below is a detail from Still Life with Lemons, Oranges and a Rose (1633, Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena), the only still life Zurbarán ever signed and dated, and widely considered a masterwork of the genre. Together they mark the two poles of his still life practice - the ceremonial arrangement of humble vessels, and the symbolic composition in which fruit, flower and water carry the weight of religious allegory. Our poster imagines a summer 1984 exhibition at the Haverford Foundation in Washington, D.C., conceived as a focused scholarly show built around a small number of key works. The design references the gallery typography and restrained institutional voice of major American foundations in the early and mid-1980s — a period that saw renewed curatorial interest in Spanish Golden Age painting, culminating in William B. Jordan's landmark 1985 exhibition Spanish Still Life in the Golden Age at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth. This is a designed poster, not a historical reproduction. It has been created as part of Art Poster Archive, a project focused on period-accurate exhibition graphics for artists and movements.
Specifications
- Size
- A3 (11.7 x 16.5 ins), A2 (16.5 x 23.4 ins), 18 x 24 ins (45 x 61 cm), A1 (23.4 x 33.1 ins), 24 x 36 ins (61 x 91 cm)
Variants (5)
- A3 (11.7 x 16.5 ins) — 34.26 USD — In stock
- A2 (16.5 x 23.4 ins) — 50.72 USD — In stock
- 18 x 24 ins (45 x 61 cm) — 50.72 USD — In stock
- A1 (23.4 x 33.1 ins) — 75.39 USD — In stock
- 24 x 36 ins (61 x 91 cm) — 75.39 USD — In stock
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