Fisherman's Breakfast , ca. 1965
20 x 24 in (h x w)
Oil on linen

Seventeenth-century Dutch still life paintings often featured fish, ceramics, glassware, and linens to celebrate the riches of the table--and to showcase the artist's prowess at rendering a variety of surfaces. Here Hatton seems to offer a more modest, Colorado version of this tradition, complete with fresh trout and the blades of grass that had protected them in the fisherman's creel, as well as a cast iron frying pan and a red Hill's Brothers coffee can where Hatton stored bacon fat for cooking and soap making. According to Hatton's niece, it was Hatton's brother-in-law, George, who caught these trout for breakfast, and he was not thrilled when Hatton appropriated them for her painting
instead.

More from Gregory Allicar Museum of Art

The border, from the "Nogales, Arizona/Sonora" series , 2017
8 x 10 in (h x w)
Daguerréotype
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Swamp Thing version LIFE cover, from "Life, Times, and Matters of the Swamp" series , 2007
59.3 x 46.5 in (h x w)
Found Life Magazines
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Spiral Jetty, Utah # 1 , 2017
8 x 10 in (h x w)
Daguerréotype
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Self-immolation of Thich Quang Duc from the "Immortality: The Remnants of the Vietnam and American War series" , 2008
12.3 x 14.6 in (h x w)
Chlorophyll print and resin
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Rocks and minerals #3, Death Valley National Park, CA , 2016
8 x 10 in (h x w)
Daguerréotype
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art