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Art Gallery |
About Frans Hals |
Hals,
Frans (circa 1580-1666), Dutch painter, one of the greatest masters of the
art of portraiture, much admired for his brilliant lighting effects and the freedom of his
brushwork. Hals was born in Antwerp, Belgium, and probably trained by the Dutch painter
Karel van Mander. He spent all of his adult life in Haarlem, the Netherlands, finding
patronage with the wealthy middle-class merchants and burghers of his time. Throughout his
life he received important commissions for group portraits of the officers and
corporations of Haarlem; toward the end of his life he was granted a small pension by the
city. He died September 1, 1666, in what is now the Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem.
In all of his portraits Hals achieved an air of complete spontaneity; his subjects give
the impression of being caught in a fleeting, but characteristic, pose and expression. The
gay mood of the early work The Laughing Cavalier (1624, Wallace Collection, London), the
subject's apparently momentary smile and stance, demonstrate Hals's ability to attain the
immediacy of a sketch by the use of rapid, spontaneous brushstrokes. The broad brushstroke
is characteristic of his work and adds a robust and lively quality to his portraits,
particularly to the genre or character pieces he painted from 1620 to 1640. One of the
most famous, the portrait of the Romani (Gypsy) tavern girl La bohémienne (1630, Louvre,
Paris) owes its gaiety and brightness to two other painting techniques Hals employed:
fully illuminating the figures with direct light, and blending the brilliant colors
directly on the canvas.
Although his portraits appear spontaneous and uncalculated, Hals was an expert technician,
and his studies are always skillfully composed. His talent is particularly evident in his
nine group portraits of the burgher guards and corporations of Haarlem, all of which are
now in the Frans Hals Museum. In these group portraits Hals demonstrates his ability to
catch each man in a characteristic pose, thus giving the group an air of informality and
naturalness; each individual is clearly portrayed, yet all are linked in a well-balanced
pattern in line and color. As his style matured, Hals replaced the bright colors of his
earliest canvases with a more monochromatic color treatment. In his last group portrait,
Regentesses of the Old Men's Almshouse (1664, Frans Hals Museum), he limited his palette
to somber shades of black and gray, relying on broader and more vigorous brushstrokes to
accentuate light and color value. This work is considered his masterpiece, because the
style lends a greater austerity and depth to the study, while simultaneously it fuses the
group into a natural and harmonious pattern. In this group portrait, Hals achieves a new
dignity and feeling for the character of the subjects that is absent from his earlier
works, yet retains a spontaneous effect by the dexterity and facility of his brushwork.).