David Rijckaert II was earlier believed to have been a painter of landscapes as well as
genre scenes. The current view is that he did not paint landscapes as the attribution of landscapes to him was the result of a mix-up with his brother Marten, a prominent landscape painter. The genre scenes formerly attributed to him are now held to be by the hand of his son David III. David Rijckaert II remains to date a relatively mysterious and obscure artist since art historians are still in the process of putting together his œuvre from a few signed works. New attributions still occur such as in 2009 when the
Still life with a lemon and capon in the
Rijksmuseum Twenthe was attributed to Ryckaert. There are currently only about 15 still lifes attributed to David Rijckaert II. As his style is close to that of the leading Antwerp still life painters
Osias Beert and
Jacob Foppens van Es, some of his works were previously attributed to these two artists. This is for instance the case with the
Still life with lobster at the
Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, formerly attributed to Osias Beert and the
Still life with oysters, fruit, biscuits and ornamental tableware in the
Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, formerly attributed to Osias Beert and Jacob Foppens van Es. The known works of David Rijckaert II fall into two categories: sumptuous still lifes of porcelain, expensive glassware, silverware, pewter dishes, etc. and so-called ‘banketjes’, i.e. banquet or breakfast pieces depicting food on a tabletop. His works follow the stylistic characteristics of the earliest still life painters
Osias Beert (c. 1580–late 1624),
Georg Flegel (1566–1638) and
Clara Peeters (1589?–1657) in their chromatic palette, sharply illuminated foreground and meticulous, realistic rendering of the objects depicted. They also resemble to a lesser extent the work of his contemporary, the Antwerp still life artist
Jacob van Hulsdonck. The market for his small cabinet pictures would have been educated collectors of Antwerp who were familiar with their symbolism and religious references. Ryckaert's compositions are painstakingly constructed with meticulous attention to detail. The objects and forms are arranged in separation from each other on the inclined surface of a table. By juxtaposing food, dishes and precious objects within various planes in space, David Rijckaert II was able to increase their legibility. The frontal and distributive presentation is still archaic while his attention for detail and strong realism show his adherence to the Flemish tradition. Characteristic for his style are the dark abstract backgrounds and the bright, enamel-like colours. ==References==