
Woman with a Goblet
Ľudovít Pitthordt·1900
Historical Context
'Woman with a Goblet,' painted by Pitthordt around 1900, deploys a traditional prop—the drinking vessel—within what may be either a genre scene or an allegorical figure study. The goblet's presence has historical resonance: in seventeenth-century Dutch painting it carried moral implications, and in Symbolist contexts it could signify temptation, abundance, or ritual. Pitthordt's Central European context blends these traditions, and the work's ambiguity reflects the period's comfort with subjects that resist simple categorisation. The Slovak National Gallery holds the work.
Technical Analysis
The goblet serves as a light-catching element that anchors the composition and provides technical interest in rendering reflective metal or glass. Pitthordt differentiates surface qualities—skin, fabric, and vessel—within a restrained palette, demonstrating his capacity for material description.




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