General Fyt was a versatile still-life specialist. Although better known for his hunting, game and animal pieces he also painted beautiful still life compositions with flowers and fruit. He was very prolific and is believed to have produced around 380 paintings, many of them signed and dated. His works were sought after by important art collectors of his day and are now in the collections of many leading international museums. Fyt was particularly skilled in the delicate rendering of the various textures of the fur and plumage of the animals he depicted.
Hunting pieces Fyt innovated the genre of the hunting piece by moving the scene in which the dead game was displayed from an indoor table top to an open landscape. He was the first artist to depict game as a subject of hunting rather than as food displayed in a home or kitchen. He did not place fruit and vegetables in his game pieces but rather dogs forming part of the hunting scene in an outdoor landscape. Hounds play an important role in these pieces and together with the hunting equipment they point to the proximity of the master. Fyt occasionally included portraits of individuals and families in these game pieces. Some of his game pieces display the scene as if seen through the eyes of an animal witnessing the scene. An example is the
Dead Game and Weasels (c. 1642,
Detroit Institute of Arts). The adoption of the animal viewpoint has been interpreted as Fyt's reflection on new philosophical and scientific ideas on the differences and similarities between animal and human consciousness that were developed in 17th-century Europe. Fyt's innovative game pieces were influential on artists practicing the genre in France and the Dutch Republic.
Flower pieces Fyt created flower pieces in the later part of his career from 1643 onwards. He depicted large flowers with drooping blooms, such as peonies, tulips with other flowers extending high above them. The pieces are typically arranged in a vase. In a few works the vase seems to have fallen over or is placed on an architectural element. Fyt uses fairly broad and fluid brushstrokes, in places with
impasto. His choice of palette is careful and more tonal than that of his master Snyders. He also relies on
chiaroscuro effects. ==Collaborations==