The Kimbell Art Museum acquired of Still Life with Melon, Watermelon, and Other Fruits, painted c. 1610–20 by the Italian artist known as “Pensionante del Saraceni,” the name historians have given to an as-yet-unidentified artist associated with a small group of paintings created in Rome around 1610–20.
This quiet yet powerful work is among the finest and earliest of the independent still lifes painted in Italy in the wake of Caravaggio (Michelangelo Merisi), whose bold realism transformed the genre. Simultaneously, Caravaggio’s Cardsharps (c. 1596–97) has returned to the Kimbell after being included in the historic exhibition Caravaggio 2025 at the Palazzo Barberini in Rome, which received more than 450,000 visitors. Both paintings are now on view at the Kimbell in the Louis I. Kahn Building.
“The Pensionante del Saraceni is a fascinating and mysterious painter who worked among the Caravaggesque artists in Rome in the decade following Caravaggio’s death in 1610,” said Eric M. Lee, director of the Kimbell Art Museum. “Still Life with Melon, Watermelon, and Other Fruitsis one of the artist’s most important paintings, and it will make a significant contribution to the Kimbell’s small but outstanding collections of still lifes and works influenced by Caravaggio’s distinctive style.”
Still Life with Melon, Watermelon, and Other Fruits is an approximately two- by two-foot (55.5 x 71.5 cm) composition that presents two groups of near-life-sized fruits, fully ripe and ready to be eaten, balancing their varied contours and volumes. Soft, enveloping light reveals realistic yet poetic elements, including each fruit’s individual texture and color: a succulent orange cantaloupe, moist pink watermelon flesh, a leathery pomegranate with seeds like garnets, a cluster of dark blue grapes, a waxy red and yellow apple, and the dappled skin of a green pear. Like most still-life paintings, it stimulates the senses: a feast for the eyes, the fruit is fragrant, gustatory, and tactile—yet momentarily silent, awaiting consumption.
The artist’s sophistication is evident in the tight framing of the composition, which barely crops the arrangement of fruits at either side. Set against a dark background, the objects are placed toward the front edge of a softly illuminated stone ledge, whose back edge is tipped slightly forward for display. The composition is brought close to the viewer, as curled leaves and grape tendrils, along with smaller fruits and scattered seeds strewn across the picture, enhance the feeling of proximity and tangibility. What at first seems to be distant darkness beyond the stone tabletop suddenly comes into focus as a nearby wall when the viewer notices an inconspicuous nail casting a soft shadow like a sundial.
Given the extremely high quality of the painting, it is surprising that we cannot put a name to its maker. The unidentified artist of Still Life with Melon, Watermelon, and Other Fruits has been nicknamed by historians the “Pensionante del Saraceni,” referring to someone who lodged with Carlo Saraceni (1579–1620), a Venetian painter working in Rome, and shows affinities with Saraceni’s paintings. (Saraceni is known to have taken in boarders.) The so-called Pensionante was likely Italian, though he may have been French, Netherlandish, or Spanish. His paintings show deep sympathy and understanding of Caravaggio’s innovative style. The Pensionante distinguishes himself as a master by his realism, soft lighting, and an overall restrained, calm, and poetic mood. Unlike Caravaggio’s famous painting of blemished and insect-infested fruits and withered leaves, the Pensionante’s still life does not immediately suggest vanitas—the passing of time that leads to mortality. Neither is it an idealized still life depicting perfect specimens. Rather, Still Life with a Melon, Watermelon, and Other Fruits exalts the natural world and the very real qualities of the fruits—all varieties that would have come to maturity in late summer or autumn, to be enjoyed in all their abundance.
Still Life with a Melon, Watermelon, and other Fruits joins other still lifes at the Kimbell including Jacques de Gheyn’s Vase of Flowers with a Curtain (1615); Louise Moillon’s Still Life with Strawberries, Basket of Cherries, and Branch of Gooseberries (1631); Jean Siméon Chardin’s The Cut Melon (1760); Luis Meléndez’s Still Life with Oranges, Jars, and Boxes of Sweets (c. 1760–65); and Anne Vallayer-Coster’s Still Life with Mackerel (1787). The new acquisition will now share a museum home with The Cardsharps (c. 1596–97) by Caravaggio, who influenced this and countless other works, enabling still life to enjoy a level of esteem and appreciation by the same patrons who acquired his portraits and religious paintings. Other works at the Kimbell where Caravaggio’s influence is evident include Guercino’s Christ and the Woman of Samaria (c. 1619–20) and Artemisia Gentileschi’s Penitent Mary Magdalene (1625–26). The Cardsharps, a visitor favorite and highlight of the Kimbell’s permanent collection, is now back on view in the Kahn Building after a five-month loan for the successful, extended exhibition Caravaggio 2025 at the Gallerie Nazionali di Arte Antica - Palazzo Barberini in Rome.
Main Image: Pensionante del Saraceni, Still Life with Melon, Watermelon, and Other Fruits, (circa 1610–20), oil on canvas. Kimbell Art Museum