The Bourgeois' Kitchen

Provenance

M. Bruslay, Paris, by 1886. Shepherd Gallery, New York. Bought in May 1979 by Noah L. Butkin, Cleveland. Given to the CMA on 19 December 1980.

The Bourgeois' Kitchen

Octave Tassaert

1854

Accession Number

1980.286

Medium

oil on fabric

Dimensions

Unframed: 46.3 x 38.1 cm (18 1/4 x 15 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Bequest of Noah L. Butkin

Tags

Painting Impressionist & Modern (1851–1900) Oil Painting French

Background & Context

Background Story

Octave Tassaert (1800-1874) was a French painter known for the characterful, precisely observed genre paintings of domestic life that make him one of the most accomplished genre painters of the 19th-century French tradition. The Bourgeois' Kitchen from 1854 depicts a bourgeois kitchen in the characterful, precisely observed manner that distinguishes Tassaert's best work from the more general genre painting of his contemporaries. Tassaert was known for his characterful, precisely observed depictions of domestic life that combine precise observation with characterful narrative detail, and the bourgeois kitchen subject shows his talent for depicting the characterful details of middle-class domestic life.

Cultural Impact

The Bourgeois' Kitchen is important in the history of French genre painting because it demonstrates the characterful, precisely observed manner that Tassaert brought to domestic subjects as one of the most accomplished genre painters of the 19th-century French tradition. Tassaert's characterful, precisely observed depictions of domestic life—combining precise observation with the characterful narrative detail that is his most distinctive contribution—represent one of the most accomplished traditions in 19th-century French genre painting, and the 1854 painting shows this tradition at its most characterful.

Why It Matters

The Bourgeois' Kitchen is Tassaert's characterful French genre painting: a bourgeois kitchen rendered in the precisely observed manner of one of the most accomplished genre painters of the 19th-century French tradition. The 1854 painting shows the combination of precise observation with characterful narrative detail that makes French domestic genre painting distinctive.