Man with a Beer Jug is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Dutch Golden Age painter Frans Hals, painted in the early 1630s, now in a private collection.
Man with a Beer Jug | |
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Artist | Frans Hals |
Year | c. 1630 |
Catalogue | Seymour Slive, Catalog 1974: #74 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 83 cm × 66 cm (33 in × 26 in) |
Location | Private collection |
Painting
editThis painting was documented by Seymour Slive in 1974, who claimed that it was in the collection of Henry Reichhold in White Plains, New York.[1] The figure of a red deer on the front of the beer jug corresponds with the house name "Het Rode Hert" of the Haarlem beer brewer Cornelis Guldewagen, whose portrait was painted by Hals in 1660. Though the genre of the work is similar to works painted by Hals in the early thirties, the rough brush strokes are more similar to his work in the sixties. Possibly, the man with the jug and Guldewagen himself are the same:
In an old genre painting of Haarlem from the 1650s, a man is transporting beer jugs with a horse-drawn sled. The jugs have a red deer on them, the symbol of Guldewagen's brewery:[2]
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St. Bavochurch from the Southeast, by Jan Wouwerman
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Old Haarlem beer jug in the Zuiderhofje
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Frans Hals, by Seymour Slive, 1974 a catalog raisonné of Hals works by Seymour Slive: Volume Three, the catalogue, National gallery of Art: Kress Foundation, Studies in the History of European Art, London - Phaidon Press, 1974, catalog #74, pp. 44-45
- ^ Research on catalog nr. 67 "Cornelis Guldewagen", by C.A. van Hees for Frans Hals, Exhibition catalog, 1962 for the Frans Hals Museum, title : Exhibition on the Occasion of the Centenary of the Municipal Museum at Haarlem, 1862-1962, exhibition committee: H.P. Baard, Seymour Slive, A.B. de Vries
- Thomas Craven, A Treasury of Art Masterpieces: from the Renaissance to the Present Day, 1939, catalog nr. 68