Free Sample - Try One

Artist:

DeScott Evans

(American, 1847 - 1898)

Free Sample - Try One

Medium: Oil on canvas
Date: ca. 1888
Dimensions:
12 1/8 × 10 in. (30.8 × 25.4 cm)
Accession number: 84.20
Label Copy:
In this deceptive painting, DeScott Evans (who also went by the names David Scott Evans and S. S. Evans) invites the viewer to snatch an almond from what appears to be a wall-mounted box. Tricky paintings like these are known as "trompe l’oeil" (French for "deceive the eye") because they fooled viewers into thinking they were looking at three-dimensional objects, not two-dimensional paintings. Evans made at least nine paintings of various nuts very similar to this one, speaking to the popularity of this type of work. He had a very successful career as a portrait painter, having trained in Paris with a leading French master William Bouguereau. Evans likely preferred using the name S. S. Evans for trompe l’oeil paintings because his fashionable portrait-sitters might have looked down on the low brow humor of this kind of work.
Curatorial RemarksSIGNATURE; INSCRIPTIONS/MARKS