Le coin de cuisine (Kitchen Corner) | Crocker Art Museum
Le coin de cuisine (Kitchen Corner), 1883.
Edwin Deakin (American, born England, 1838–1923)
Oil on canvas, 48 5/16 x 40 7/16 in. Crocker Art Museum, long-term loan from the California Department of Finance, conserved with funds provided by Gerald D. Gordon, LOAN.2006.Deakin.4.

Edwin Deakin’s paintings represent an aesthetic evolution in California art, a shift from the sublime to the picturesque. Before Deakin, most Northern California landscapists aimed for grandeur and drama, depicting sites such as Yosemite and the Sierra as a glorious, expansive paradise. Deakin moved away from a boldly panoramic depiction of nature to a more intimate view. His early paintings include scenes of California’s architecture and wilderness, European subjects drawn from his excursions in 1877 and 1888, and San Francisco’s Chinatown. He also produced still lifes of fruit, flowers, and other decorative objects.

The third of seven children, Deakin was born in Sheffield, England. In 1850, the Deakins moved to Wolverhampton, and Edwin became an apprentice at an establishment specializing in furniture laquerwork. Except for this experience, and private study from books and gallery visits, he remained largely self-taught.

Deakin first came to San Francisco in 1870. In 1875, he shared a studio with still-life painter Samuel Marsden Brookes, who exerted an influence on Deakin’s paintings of fruit set against stone walls and more elaborate still-life compositions such as in Le Coin de Cuisine. Although painted in the United States, this painting’s subject was drawn from the artist’s European experience. Outside the window the words liberté, égalité, fraternité, the motto of the French Republic, are written on a wall.

Back to Collection
Next Previous

ArtMix

Check out Sacramento's favorite after hours pARTy bursting with live performances, DJed music, festive food and drinks, creative artmaking, and so much more!

Learn More

Current Exhibitions

Learn more

Kids + Family

The Crocker invites families to think of the Museum as a place to learn, play, and grow.

Learn More