- Artistic depictions of fruit date back 3000 years to Ancient Egypt. Still life paintings of food were found in the majority of ancient Egyptian tombs, as people genuinely believed that the paintings of food items would, in the afterlife, become tangible and available for the deceased to feed on.
- In Ancient Rome, decorative mosaic ‘emblema’ were found in the homes of wealthy and respected people of the upper classes. The ‘emblema’ pictured the diverse range of foods that rich Romans were able to indulge in, acted as a sign of hospitality for potential guests and served as a visual celebration of the seasons and the harvest.
- Sybille Ebert Schifferer, in her work Still Life: A History, alludes that depictions of fruit in 16th-century art act as symbols of the seasons and of the senses. Schifferer adds that a type of still life, known as ontbijtjes (breakfast paintings), present both a literal representation of the delicacies that the upper class might enjoy and act as a religious reminder to avoid gluttony and excess.
- In the 1500s, the discoveries of the New World and Asia led to an ardent interest in the natural world, exotic botanicals and unusual, enticing new fruits and foods. This fascination was recorded visually in the art of the time.
- The condition of the depicted fruit is often allegorical. Like human life, fruit is perishable and ephemeral, and thus many critics firmly believe that fruit acts as a representation of the transient nature of our existence. When the fruit in the portrayals appears to be fresh and ripe, this stands as a symbol of abundance, bounty, fertility, youth and vitality. However, fruit that is in a state of decay serves as a reminder of our own undeniable mortality, the inevitability of change and, in some instances, as a reflection of sin and human corruption.
- Depictions of fruit notably relate to portrayals of Adam and Eve and the notion of temptation, sin and entropy.
Eve is often depicted holding a fruit, which is most often thought to be an apple. The apple therefore has become synonymous with knowledge, corruption, immortality, temptation, the fall of man and sin, as it is associated with the Tree of Knowledge and the Garden of Eden in the Book of Genesis.
The apple’s meaning varies according to its position. When placed in Eve’s hand, the apple can be seen as symbolism for sin, temptation and the dangerous notion of enlightened and knowledgeable females. When held in Adam’s hand, the apple symbolises the consequential fall of man. However, when Christ is portrayed holding an apple, it represents the Second Adam who brings life and redemption. The differing images of the apple reflects the evolution of the symbol in Christianity; in the Old Testament, the apple was significant of the fall of man, but in the New Testament the apple an is emblem of the redemption from that fall.
The latter notion has meant that the apple is presented in pictures of the Madonna and Infant Jesus as another sign of that redemption, and as a warning against sin and temptation.
Many onlookers have interpreted Caravaggio’s Still Life with Fruit on a Stone Ledge as having both religious and sexual connotations. The stone ledge that is pictured is evocative of Caravaggio’s previous work The Entombment of Christ. Critics have attested that the grotesquely serpentine gourds and the visual suggestiveness of the exposed, split fruit allude to intimate, sensual imagery
Grapes represent fertility and salvation in their symbolic link to the blood of Christ, but also are symbolic of the dangers of debauchery. |
Linked in Christian tradition to fidelity and, therefore, to the figure of the Virgin. Lemon was often an imported fruit, thus suggesting wealth and luxury. |
A symbol of salvation and truth, as well as fecundity. |
Apples are associated with knowledge, sin, temptation, immortality, Venus, the fall of man and the image of the fallen woman. |
Pomegranates feature heavily in Judaism and are used in religious memorials to signify heavenly sweetness, or fertility.The fruit, broken or bursting open, is a symbol of the fullness of Jesus’ suffering and resurrection. |
Strong biblical associations, as the fig tree is the third tree to be mentioned in the Bible. The fig has strong connotations with modesty and sexuality, as Adam and Eve covered themselves with fig leaves. |
Oriental and porcelain decorative fruit bowls suggest the exotic spoils of geographic expansion. |