
Still life with a Bearded-Man Jar
Vincent van Gogh·1885
Historical Context
Van Gogh's still life with a bearded-man jar belongs to the Nuenen period's exploration of Dutch domestic objects. The jar in question is a traditional type of German stoneware featuring a bearded face in relief — the so-called 'Bellarmine' or 'greybeard' jug — which Van Gogh possessed and painted multiple times. Such objects provided him with both still-life material and a connection to vernacular Dutch material culture he deeply valued. The choice of humble, everyday objects rather than elaborate floral or fruit arrangements reflects his commitment to subjects drawn from ordinary life. The Kröller-Müller holds several Van Gogh still lifes featuring this distinctive vessel.
Technical Analysis
The jar is rendered with careful attention to its stoneware texture — the salt-glazed surface, the relief facial decoration — within Van Gogh's characteristically dark Dutch palette. The impasto gives the object physical presence and weight. The composition is simple and frontal, the jar occupying the compositional center against a dark background.
Look Closer
- ◆The Bellarmine jar's bearded face in relief peers out from the stoneware — a portrait within a.
- ◆Van Gogh's paint surface on the jar is thick and rough, mimicking the tactile quality of.
- ◆The dark background absorbs most light, making the warm brown of the jar emerge as if lit from.
- ◆The jar's handle is painted with a single confident dark stroke — technical shorthand that.




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