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Chocolate box art

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Wrayland Manor. The archetypal chocolate box Devon thatched house in the hamlet of Wrayland. Several old chocolate boxes and postcards depict this particular building, calling it variously the Hall House and an "Old Cottage".

Chocolate box art originally referred literally to decorations on chocolate boxes. Over the years, however, the terminology has changed; it is now applied broadly as an often pejorative term to describe paintings and designs that are overly idealistic and sentimental.

Using his own paintings of children, flowers and holiday scenes Richard Cadbury, the son of the founder of Cadbury's, introduced such designs to his chocolate boxes in the late 19th century.[1]

Renoir's paintings have been described as "chocolate box" and have been derided by Degas and Picasso for being happy, inoffensive scenes.[2] Constable's landscapes have also been so described.[3]

Aelbert Cuyp's River Landscape (1660), despite being widely regarded as his best work, has been criticised as having "chocolate box blandness".[4] Fred Swan is a modern-day proponent of chocolate box paintings as, to his detractors, was Thomas Kinkade.[5]

The term has also been applied to sculpture. A young couple standing locked in an embrace forms the centrepiece for the new £800m St Pancras International station in central London. Entitled The Meeting Place, the £1m sculpture is by Briton Paul Day who admitted, "Some will say it is a chocolate box sculpture".[6]

References

  1. ^ "Cadbury chocolate box" Archived 2009-05-20 at the Wayback Machine. Cadbury.
  2. ^ Jones, Jonathan (12 February 2007). "Angry young man". The Guardian.
  3. ^ "Landscapes of gloom". The Guardian. 25 May 2006 Archived 15 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Denny, Ned (18 March 2002). "Cuyp cake". New Statesman.
  5. ^ Milmo, Cahal (5 May 2001). "Kinkade, king of kitsch, coming to a home near you". The Independent. London. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  6. ^ Milmo, Cahal (14 February 2007). "Art that embraces a new future for St Pancras". The Independent. Retrieved 11 December 2016.