Dick Ket (1902 – 1940) was a Dutch magic realist painter
noted for his still-life paintings and self-portraits.
While Ket's earliest paintings are impressionistic in
style, he was influenced decisively by the art of the Neue Sachlichkeit in
1929, and thereafter painted in a magic realist style.
His meticulously composed and rendered still lifes
feature favorite objects such as bottles, an empty bowl, eggs, and musical
instruments. Ket juxtaposed these objects in angular arrangements, seen from a
high vantage point, their cast shadows creating emphatic diagonals.
These
compositions reveal the influence of cubism as filtered through the posters of
Cassandre, which are frequently depicted in Ket’s paintings. Another source of
inspiration came from early Netherlandish painting, which Ket admired for its
atmosphere of austere reverence that he called its quality of
"intrusiveness".
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