
Still Life—Violin and Music
William Harnett·1888
Historical Context
Still Life—Violin and Music (1888) by William Harnett, now in the collection of Metropolitan Museum of Art, demonstrates the artist's skill in the still life genre, transforming everyday objects or natural specimens into studies of color, light, and painterly observation. William Harnett was the leading American practitioner of trompe l'oeil — 'fool the eye' — still life painting, a genre that challenged viewers to question where painted illusion ended and physical reality began. His compositions of musical instruments, old books, meerschaum pipes, and currency were so realistic that the U.S.
Technical Analysis
Harnett executed his trompe l'oeil still lifes with painstaking technical precision, building up glazed layers of oil paint to render the textures of wood, metal, leather, and paper with deceptive accuracy.







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