
Published online:
24 August 2015
Published in print:
23 November 2011
Online ISBN:
9781452946603
Print ISBN:
9780816667642
Contents
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Objects in Early Floral Still Life Paintings Objects in Early Floral Still Life Paintings
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Insects and Early Floral Still Life Painting Insects and Early Floral Still Life Painting
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Natural History Illustration: Precedents for Picturing Insects Natural History Illustration: Precedents for Picturing Insects
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The Realm of Small Things: “Not Too Plentiful like Stones” The Realm of Small Things: “Not Too Plentiful like Stones”
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Cabinets, Curiosity, and Still Life Cabinets, Curiosity, and Still Life
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Jan van Kessel’s Insect Still Lifes Jan van Kessel’s Insect Still Lifes
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Five Stitches, Specimens, and Pictures: Maria Sibylla Merian and the Processing of the Natural World
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Chapter
Three Suitable for Framing: Insects in Early Still Life Paintings
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Pages
75–102
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Published:November 2011
Cite
Neri, Janice, 'Suitable for Framing: Insects in Early Still Life Paintings', The Insect and the Image: Visualizing Nature in Early Modern Europe, 1500-1700 (Minneapolis, MN , 2011; online edn, Minnesota Scholarship Online, 24 Aug. 2015), https://doi.org/10.5749/minnesota/9780816667642.003.0003, accessed 24 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter presents early European still life insect paintings. Artists referred to cultural practices related to displaying the natural world such as kuntskammers and natural history in the formation of aesthetic conventions for this new genre. The chapter initially looks at the objects present in early floral still life paintings, where insects can be a frequent sight along with shells, coins, and so on. It also explains that European collectors actually prefer small items like coins and medals for their size and durability, making them easy to preserve in still life paintings as evident in Jan Van Kessel (the Elder)’s insect still life.
Keywords:
still life paintings, kuntskammers, natural history, floral still life, insect still life, Jan Van Kessel
Subject
History of Art
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