Still Life with a silver tazza, a roemer and oysters
1632.Room 076
The painting belongs to the type of still life designated by Vroom as monochrome banketjes, pieces first executed by Heda towards the end of the 1620s that became very popular in the Netherlands and abroad, as illustrated by the fact that there were two in the inventory of Rubens´s property. There are sufficient grounds to interpret these compositions as moralising, religious or allegorical works. In addition, they also presented an opportunity for the painter to demonstrate his skill with perspective and his mastery in portraying the reflection of light on different kinds of surfaces, textures and shapes.
Still Life with a silver tazza, a roemer and oysters combines all the compositional and stylistic devices typical of these banketjes which, despite their apparent spontaneity, are carefully meditated and highly balanced arrangements. Lined up in two diagonal axes parallel to the background, the objects and food habitual in this kind of representation are depicted on a table placed in the plane closest to the viewer and against a neutral wall. In this case -as with the Prado´s other two Heda still lifes (P02754 and P02755)- the table is only covered with a green cloth, rather than the white napkin or tablecloth frequently found in most of the painter`s works of this genre. The light both illuminates and shapes the objects and the food. It enters, top left, through a window that is outside the painting, but which is reflected in the Roemer glass containing white wine. The objects reveal a range of textures and share the same rounded shapes, linked to one another in a rhythmic combination of contrasting curves over which the light softly glides, glistening or gleaming according to the surface on which it is reflected.
The yellow of the lemon and the pearly white of the oysters are the only concession to local colour, and serve as counterpoint to the monotone range of greenish and grey-brown shades that prevail in this kind of still life.
In addition to the Roemer glass -the main feature of all these monochrome table-top still lifes- the other objects depicted here only appear in the works that have been identified and accepted as Heda´s until the mid-1630s, after which they seem to disappear. The Façon-de-Venise glass is the same as the one represented in Still Life with a silver beaker and a clock (P02755), dated 1633. The knife, too, appears in the latter and in Still Life with beer-pitcher and orange (P02754), dated 1633. Finally, the clock, which is also present in these two works, features as well in two earlier still lifes, dated 1629 (The Hague, Mauritshuis) and 1631 (Dresden, Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister). Where the food is concerned, this and another still life, also dated 1632, seem to be the first to include oysters (Posada Kubissa, T.: Pintura holandesa en el Museo Nacional del Prado. Catálogo razonado, 2009, p. 303).