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Still Life Art For Sale

Discover still life art for sale or available to rent in our online art gallery. We have hand-selected some of the most exciting contemporary artists working in the still life genre today. If you’re unsure where to start, take a look at our still life flower paintings or still life photography. Shop today to find the perfect still life piece for your home or your office.

The still life is an artistic practice that typically features an arrangement of inanimate objects, such as fruit and flowers, or domestic objects, such as candlesticks and glassware. Due to the lack of human form, this genre historically did not rank highly within the hierarchy of art genres. Despite this, this genre has stood the test of time.

The simple subject matter and essential nature of still life art has lent the genre to exciting experimentations of colour, space and form, arguably reasserting its place within the art world.

Andrew McNeile Jones' expertly finished still life paintings hark back to the Dutch tradition in their contrasting tonality. Bacchus and Ariadne (2018) hints at Roman culture through simple objects and rich colour that subtly reference the Roman god of wine. Additionally, Jones’ use of light and shadow creates striking images whereby the dark background illuminates the foreground objects, elevating their beauty and intensifying his use of colour.

Viacheslav Rogin opts for the traditional subject matter of fruits and household items. While his compositions are simple, his treatment of light and space elevates these items to be something of intrigue and beauty. His use of contrasting colours and rough application of paint accentuates the surface texture of the canvas in Mediterranean Evening (2017), cloaking the painting in a soft hue and allowing one to imagine a hot day fading into a cool Mediterranean evening.

Dawn Beckles' vibrant paintings play with the relationship between an object, its environment and its owner. In After We Sat (2019), Beckles’ beautifully detailed interior is absent of human life, yet the popping colour and personal objects allow the viewer to imagine the room full of life and history. Beckles draws on her Barbadian background by opting for bright colours and depicting exotic flowers and birds.

The Origins of Still Life

The earliest example of still life painting can be dated back to the 15th century, where paintings of food and crops were found on the walls of ancient Egyptian burial sites. This subject matter reflects funerary practices, where the dead were buried with items intended as an offering to the Gods and to sustain the deceased in the afterlife.

Paintings of inanimate objects can also be found throughout the Ancient Greek and Roman periods, predominantly as decoration for vases, mosaics or frescoes. It wasn’t until the 16th century that this subject matter was considered an art form in its own right. Many historians consider Jacopo de Barbari’s wall painting of a dead partridge and a pair of iron gloves, completed in 1504, to be the first European still life.

The genre became particularly popular with the Dutch, as Northern European artists began to favour common scenes of everyday life over heavily religious and idealised imagery.

The Dutch Golden Age

The term still life derives from the 16th century Dutch word stilleven. However, still life painting became most prominent throughout the 17th century, an era known as The Dutch Golden Age. At the beginning of the century, Dutch still lifes had a simple and nationalistic tone, featuring local products such as cheese. Yet as Dutch society became increasingly wealthy due to colonial ventures and international trading, we witness an influx of foreign goods into compositions. In turn, the modest and local spread flourished into a luxurious and exotic banquet that celebrated the country’s wealth.

The Dark Side of Still Life

While many art critics see this era as a celebration of decadence, some interpret a darker and morally symbolic side to the genre. The depiction of half eaten fruit or flowers in full bloom symbolise life. Yet these symbols of vitality are often juxtaposed with symbols of death. Clocks and hourglasses or burnt out candles suggest the fragility and fleeting nature of life. Additionally, a skull is often incorporated to further reinforce the symbolic meaning of the painting as a memento mori, a Latin phrase meaning ‘remember you must die’.

Modern Painting

Still life painting continued throughout the modern era, where experimentations in colour and space manipulated the staple subject matter. Painting inanimate objects allowed artists to develop their style as they had control over the composition and lighting. Cubist artists such as Pablo Picasso or Georges Braque played with the familiarity of everyday objects by fragmenting their shape in a move towards abstraction.

Postmodern Still Life

The familiarity and availability of mundane items allowed this genre to continuously reappear in different artistic styles. The Dada movement bridged the gap between still life painting and sculpture by creating compositions of found objects, pre-empting the postmodern era by closing the gap between art and daily life.

Commercial and popular culture lead to the rise of Pop Art, where artists exalted banal items and in doing so reformed the status of still life art. Andy Warhol’s infamous Campbell’s Soup Cans (1962) can be considered as a modern reinterpretation of still life.

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    Two heads with vases by Pascal Marlin
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    Two heads with vases by Pascal Marlin
    Two heads with vases
    Collage - 46x55 cm
    Lack of Attention by Rossella Agostini
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    Lack of Attention by Rossella Agostini
    Lack of Attention
    Photography - 43x28 cm
    STILL LIFE FUCHSIAS by HOLLY WATT
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    STILL LIFE FUCHSIAS by HOLLY WATT
    STILL LIFE FUCHSIAS
    Photography - 100x150 cm
    Everything I've had but couldn't keep by Paula MacArthur
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    Everything I've had but couldn't keep by Paula MacArthur
    Everything I've had but couldn't keep
    Paintings - 140x140 cmRent for €400 /mo
    Kitchen of Flat-share by Tou Toa
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    Kitchen of Flat-share by Tou Toa
    Kitchen of Flat-share
    Paintings - 23x30 cmRent for €55 /mo
    BANKSY by Zoe Moss
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    BANKSY by Zoe Moss
    BANKSY
    Paintings - 60x50 cmRent for €310 /mo
    Prosperous flowers 536 by Jingshen You
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    Prosperous flowers 536 by Jingshen You
    Prosperous flowers 536
    Paintings - 50x70 cm
    New Court Gallery Interior 3 by Tom Voyce
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    New Court Gallery Interior 3 by Tom Voyce
    New Court Gallery Interior 3
    Paintings - 30x20 cmRent for €80 /mo
    Waterlilies 773 by Jingshen You
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    Waterlilies 773 by Jingshen You
    Waterlilies 773
    Paintings - 80x60 cm
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    Vinales by Anne Du Planty
    Vinales
    Paintings - 89x130 cm
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     La Poignité du Banal by Geoffrey Ansel Agrons
    La Poignité du Banal
    Photography - 152x102 cmRent for €90 /mo
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    The War Will Still Be Here Tomorrow II by Geoffrey Ansel Agrons
    The War Will Still Be Here Tomorrow II
    Photography - 127x85 cmRent for €85 /mo
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    An apple by Simon M Smith
    An apple
    Paintings - 12x12 cm
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    A Beautiful Thing is Never Perfect by Magnus Gjoen
    A Beautiful Thing is Never Perfect
    Prints - 70x70 cmRent for €66 /mo
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    Interior of an Irish Artist with her Grandaughter pictured by Lottie Cole
    Interior of an Irish Artist with her Grandaughter pictured
    Paintings - 120x100 cmRent for €545 /mo
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    How Do You Like Them Apples?  by Sarah Evans
    How Do You Like Them Apples?
    Prints - 59x42 cmRent for €40 /mo
    Nature morte dans un secrétariat
    Installation - 10x15 cm
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    Spring Bouquet by Ihar Barkhatkou
    Spring Bouquet
    Paintings - 92x73 cm
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    Wildflowers 2 (Germany) by Tommy Kwak
    Wildflowers 2 (Germany)
    Photography - 102x76 cm
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    Wire Plant Stand by Michael Pfleghaar
    Wire Plant Stand
    Paintings - 91x91 cm
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    #real #me #ad 1 by N. A. Vague
    #real #me #ad 1
    Photography - 42x42 cm
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    Nothing to hide #5 by Kolle
    Nothing to hide #5
    Prints - 98x82 cm
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    Vase Composition V’25 by Milena Paladino
    Vase Composition V’25
    Paintings - 50x40 cm
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    The time line by Lobo Velar de Irigoyen
    The time line
    Prints - 120x90 cm
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    banane sur fond blanc by Olivier Payeur
    banane sur fond blanc
    Paintings - 14x20 cm
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