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still lifes

 Subject
Subject Source: Art & Architecture Thesaurus
Scope Note: Images in which the focus is a depiction of inanimate objects, as distinguished from art in which such objects are subsidiary elements in a composition.The term is generally applied to depictions of fruit, flowers, meat or dead game, vessels, eating utensils, and other objects, including skulls, candles, and hourglasses, typically arranged on a table. Such images were known since the time of ancient Greece and Rome; however, the subject was exploited by some 16th-century Italian painters, and was highly developed in 17th-century Dutch painting, where the qualities of form, color, texture, and composition were valued, and the images were intended to relay allegorical messages. The subject is generally seen in oil paintings, though it can also be found in mosaics, watercolors, prints, collages, and photographs. The term originally included paintings in which the focus was on living animals at rest, although such depictions would now be called "animal paintings."

Found in 2 Collections and/or Records:

Persons and Places: 25 Years of Drawings by Spencer Macky, October 4-November 16, 1952

 Sub-Series
Abstract

Arranged by the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts, a retrospective exhibition of 60 drawings and sketches by American artist Spencer Macky. Shown at the San Francisco Public Library. The exhibition records span six folders.

Dates: October 4-November 16, 1952

Three Centuries of Botanical Prints, March 6-31, 1952

 Sub-Series
Abstract

From the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts collection, an exhibition of prints of botanical subjects by artists of the eighteenth to twentieth centuries. Shown at the San Francisco Public Library. No materials remain for this exhibition.

Dates: March 6-31, 1952