Burger painted this cheerful still life, with its vivid blues and greens and bright, candy-colored pinks, as a student at Arthur B. Carles’s studio on Chestnut Street in Philadelphia. Volumes are created through subtle transitions of light colors to dark and warm colors to cool. The work demonstrates the artist’s embrace of Carles’s modernist approach, moving beyond traditional representation toward a more expressive use of color and form.
Burger graduated from the Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art (later the University of the Arts) and enrolled in private classes with Arthur B. Carles, who became a transformative influence on her work and artistic philosophy. As Burger recalled, when she first showed Carles her work, he said, “You haven’t painted yet, but I think you can.” With his guidance, she experienced what she described as “a real improvement in my painting, a first glimpse into the creative process.” Carles’s instruction emphasized intuitive expression over technical precision, encouraging students to trust their artistic instincts. His memorable directives included, “Look at your palette and then at your painting. Which do you like better?” and “Make your painting sing!”









