Trompe l’oeil paintings

What is Trompe l’oeil?

Trompe l’oeil — French for “deceive the eye” — describes paintings that imitate reality so convincingly that, for a moment, the viewer mistakes the representation for the thing itself. Although the term first appeared as a noun around 1800, the tradition it describes reaches back to antiquity. The Roman writer Pliny the Elder recounts the famous contest between the Greek painters Zeuxis and Parrhasius: Zeuxis painted grapes so lifelike that birds flew down to peck at them, while Parrhasius deceived Zeuxis himself with a painted curtain. Roman wall paintings at Pompeii likewise used fictive architecture, vistas and garden panoramas to dissolve the boundaries of interior space.

The classical pursuit of perfect imitation, or mimesis, took on new force during the Renaissance, aided by advances in naturalistic painting and the development of one-point perspective. Leon Battista Alberti’s idea of the picture as a window helped artists think anew about the relationship between real and fictive space. In Venice around 1490, Vittore Carpaccio painted folded letters tucked beneath a strap on the reverse of his Hunting on the Lagoon (J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, inv. no. 79.PB.72), creating an early form of the letter-rack motif that later became central to the genre.

Trompe l’oeil flourished especially in the 17th century, when Dutch and Flemish artists such as Samuel van Hoogstraten, Cornelis Norbertus Gijsbrechts and Wallerand Vaillant produced letter racks, niches, cupboards and other illusionistic “pictures-as-objects.” A second flowering occurred in late 19th century America, in the work of William Michael Harnett, John Haberle and John Frederick Peto, who transformed ordinary objects — papers, books, mugs, pipes, currency and musical instruments — into feats of painterly deception. In the 20th century, the genre’s questions about representation and reality were taken up in new ways by Braque, Picasso, Duchamp and Jasper Johns.

What are the characteristics of Trompe l’oeil?

Trompe l’oeil paintings depend on a carefully managed illusion. Objects are usually shown at or near life size, in plausible scale and close to the picture plane, so that they appear to occupy the viewer’s own space. In many examples, the painting is treated not as a window onto distant space but as a flat surface on which objects seem to rest, hang, project or cast shadows. The artist’s hand is deliberately suppressed: brushwork must be precise, controlled and nearly invisible if the illusion is to succeed.

The genre often relies on the convincing imitation of familiar materials. Painted wood grain, paper, metal, glass, fur, feathers, wax seals, nails, and ribbons all help persuade the eye that the objects before it are real. Common motifs include the cartellino, a painted slip of paper often bearing an inscription or signature; the letter rack, in which correspondence and personal effects are held in place by ribbons; the niche, cupboard or studiolo filled with books, vessels or instruments; the chantourné, a painting cut to the silhouette of the object it depicts; and grisaille imitations of sculptural reliefs.

Trompe l’oeil draws attention not only to the artist’s skill, but also to the status of painting itself: both an image and a physical thing.

Related lots

Trompe l’oeil artists

A fluffy bird, two hanging fish, and a bottle are arranged in a rustic wooden setting.

Louis-Léopold Boilly

A person sits reading a book near columns, with a dog lying beside them on a tiled floor.

Samuel van Hoogstraten

A still life painting shows papers, a quill, envelopes with wax seals, and a portrait on a wooden board.

Edward Collier

A large black letter "C" is centered inside a bordered square with rounded corners.

René Magritte

A peeled orange, an unpeeled orange, and a rustic jug sit on a draped white cloth.

John Frederick Peto

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A person in dark clothing and a red hat is depicted against a dark background in a painting.