Frans Hals the Elder (, ; ; – 26 August 1666) was a Dutch Golden Age painter. He lived and worked in Haarlem, a city in which the local authority of the day frowned on religious painting in places of worship but citizens liked to decorate their homes with works of art. Hals was highly sought after by wealthy burgher commissioners of individual, married-couple, family, and institutional-group portraits. He also painted tronies for the general market.
There were two quite distinct schools of portraiture in 17th-century Haarlem: the neat (represented, for example, by Verspronck); and a looser, more painterly style at which Frans Hals excelled. Some of Hals's portrait work is characterised by a subdued palette, reflecting the politely serious tones of his fashionable clients' wardrobe. In contrast, the personalities he paints are full of life, typically with a friendly glint in the eye or the glimmer of a smile on the lips.
Hals was born at Antwerp in the southern Spanish Netherlands, but because of the chaos wrought there by the Spanish at that time, his family moved to Haarlem when he was little. Many of his Haarlem clients were also émigrés from the South.
Biography
Hals was born in 1582 or 1583 in Antwerp, then in the Spanish Netherlands, as the son of cloth merchant Franchois Fransz Hals van Mechelen ( 1542–1610) and his second wife Adriaentje van Geertenryck. Like many, Hals's parents fled during the Fall of Antwerp (1584–1585) from the south to Haarlem in the new Dutch Republic in the north, where he lived for the remainder of his life. Hals studied under Flemish émigré Karel van Mander, whose Mannerist influence, however, is barely noticeable in Hals's work.
In 1610, Hals became a member of the Haarlem Guild of Saint Luke, and he started to earn money as an art restorer for the town council. He worked on their large art collection, which Karel van Mander had described in his Schilderboeck ("Painter's Book") published in Haarlem in 1604. The most notable works were those of Geertgen tot Sint Jans, Jan van Scorel, and Jan Mostaert that hung in the St John's Church in Haarlem. The restoration work was paid for by the council. The council had confiscated all Catholic religious art in the Haarlemse Noon, although it did not formally possess the entire collection until 1625, when the city fathers had decided which were suitable for the town hall. The remaining art, which was considered too Roman Catholic, was sold to Cornelis Claesz van Wieringen, a fellow guild member, on condition that he remove it from Haarlem. It was in this cultural context that Hals began his career in portraiture, since the market had disappeared for religious themes.
The earliest known example of Hals's art is the portrait of Jacobus Zaffius (1611). His 'breakthrough' came with the life-sized group portrait The Banquet of the Officers of the St George Militia Company in 1616. His most famous sitter was René Descartes, whom he painted in 1649.
thumb|Statue of Frans Hals in Florapark, Haarlem
Frans Hals married his first wife Anneke Harmensdochter around 1610. Frans was of Catholic birth, however, so their marriage was recorded in the city hall and not in church. Unfortunately, the exact date is unknown because the older marriage records of the Haarlem city hall before 1688 have not been preserved. Similarly, historical accounts of Hals's propensity for drink were largely based on embellished anecdotes of his early biographers like Arnold Houbraken; there is no direct evidence that Hals did drink heavily. After his first wife died, Hals took on the young daughter of a fishmonger to look after his children and, in 1617, he married Lysbeth Reyniers. They married in Spaarndam, a small village outside the banns of Haarlem, because she was already eight months pregnant. Hals was a devoted father, and they went on to have eight children.
Contemporaries such as Rembrandt moved their households according to the caprices of their patrons, but Hals remained in Haarlem and insisted that his customers come to him. According to the Haarlem archives, a schutterstuk that Hals started in Amsterdam was finished by Pieter Codde because Hals refused to paint in Amsterdam, insisting that the militiamen come to Haarlem to sit for their portraits. For this reason, we can be sure that all sitters were either from Haarlem or were visiting Haarlem when they had their portraits made.
Hals's work was in demand through much of his life, but he lived so long that he eventually went out of style as a painter and experienced financial difficulties. In addition to his painting, he worked as a restorer, art dealer, and art tax expert for the city councilors. His creditors took him to court several times, and he sold his belongings to settle his debt with a baker in 1652. The inventory of the property seized mentions only three mattresses and bolsters, an armoire, a table, and five pictures Left destitute, he was given an annuity of 200 florins in 1664 by the municipality. He had been receiving a city pension, which was highly unusual and a sign of the esteem with which he was regarded. After his death, his widow applied for aid and was admitted to the local almshouse, where she later died.
Artistic career
thumb|350px|Frans Hals, later finished by [[Pieter Codde. De Magere Compagnie. 1637. Oil on canvas, 209 x 429 cm, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam]]
Hals is best known for his portraits, mainly of wealthy citizens such as Pieter van den Broecke and Isaac Massa, whom he painted three times. He also painted large group portraits for local civic guards and for the regents of local hospitals. He was a Dutch Golden Age painter who practiced an intimate realism with a radically free approach. His pictures illustrate the various strata of society: banquets or meetings of officers, guildsmen,
File:Dorothea Berck door Frans Hals in 1644.jpg|Dorothea Berck (1593–1684), wife of Joseph Coymans, 1644, Private Collection.
File:Frans Hals 038.jpg|Portrait of Stephan Geraedts, husband of Isabella Coymans, 1652, Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp.
File:Frans Hals - Portrait d'Isabella Coymans.jpg|Isabella Coymans, wife of Stephan Geraedts, 1652, Private Collection.
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The only record of his work in the first decade of his independent activity is an engraving by Jan van de Velde copied from the lost portrait of The Minister Johannes Bogardus. Early works by Hals show him as a careful draughtsman capable of great finish yet spirited, such as Two singing boys with a lute and a music book and Banquet of the Officers of the St George Militia (1616). The flesh that he painted is pastose and burnished, less clear than it subsequently became. Later, he became more effective, displayed more freedom of hand and a greater command of effect.
His style changed throughout his life. Paintings of vivid color were gradually replaced by pieces where mostly black came to dominate. This was probably due to the sober dress of his Protestant sitters, more than any personal preference. One simple way to observe this change is to look at all of the portraits that he painted through the years with his trademark pose leaning over the back of a chair:
<gallery widths="140px" heights="140px" perrow="4">
File:Portrait of Isaac Abrahamsz. Massa by Frans Hals.png|1626
File:Frans Hals - Oficial Sentado.jpg|1631
File:Frans Hals 037.jpg|1633
<!-- :Image:Willem Heythuijsen by Frans Hals 1634.jpg|1634 -->
File:Frans Hals 035.jpg|1635
File:Frans Hals, Willem Coymans, 1645.jpg|1645
File:Frans Hals 066.jpg|1645
File:Frans Hals - Frans Post (Worcester Art Museum).jpg|1655
File:Frans Hals 068.jpg|1665
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Portrait painter
thumbnail|Willem van Heythuysen by Frans Hals (1634, one of two portraits of Van Heythuysen attributed to Hals).
Later in his life, his brush strokes became looser, fine detail becoming less important than the overall impression. His earlier pieces radiated gaiety and liveliness, while his later portraits emphasized the stature and dignity of the people portrayed. This austerity is displayed in Regents of the St Elizabeth Hospital in 1641 and, two decades later, The Regents and Regentesses of the Old Men's Almshouse (), which are masterpieces of color, though in substance all but monochromes. His restricted palette is particularly noticeable in his flesh tints, which became greyer from year to year, until finally the shadows were painted in almost absolute black, as in the Tymane Oosdorp. To this group of pictures belong the Lute Player, the Gypsy Girl and the Laughing Fisherboy, whilst the Marriage Portrait of Isaac Massa and Beatrix van der Laen and the somewhat confused group of the Beresteyn Family at the Louvre show a similar tendency. Far less scattered in arrangement than this Beresteyn group, and in every respect one of the most masterly of Hals's achievements is the group called The Painter and his Family, which was almost unknown until it appeared at the winter exhibition at the Royal Academy in 1906. disagreed with Slive and published a shorter œuvre of 145 paintings in his Frans Hals. Das Gesamtwerk.
It is not known whether Hals ever painted landscapes, still lifes or narrative pieces, but it is unlikely. His debut for Haarlem society in 1616 with his large group portrait for the St George militia shows all three disciplines, but if that painting was his signboard for future commissions, it seems he was subsequently only hired for portraits. Many artists in the 17th century in Holland opted to specialise, and Hals also appears to have been a pure portrait specialist.
Painting technique
thumb|left|Frans Hals. [[The Gypsy Girl (Hals)| The Gypsy Girl. 1628–30. Oil on wood, 58 x 52 cm. Musée du Louvre, Paris.]]
Hals was a master of a technique that utilized something previously seen as a flaw in painting, the visible brushstroke. The soft curling lines of Hals's brush are always clear upon the surface: "materially just lying there, flat, while conjuring substance and space in the eye."
In this way his style was similar to Édouard Manet; in fact, Hals was described by author Raymond Cogniat as "the Manet of his day." Lively and exciting, the technique can appear "ostensibly slapdash" Hals did occasionally paint without underdrawings or underpainting (alla prima), but most of the works were created in successive layers, as was customary at that time. Sometimes a drawing was made with chalk or paint on top of a grey or pink undercoat, and was then more or less filled in, in stages. It does seem that Hals usually applied his underpainting very loosely: he was a virtuoso from the beginning. This applies, of course, particularly to his genre works and his somewhat later, mature works. Hals displayed tremendous daring, great courage and virtuosity, and had a great capacity to pull back his hands from the canvas, or panel, at the moment of the most telling statement. He didn't 'paint them to death', as many of his contemporaries did, in their great accuracy and diligence whether requested by their clients or not.
In the 17th century his first biographer, Schrevelius wrote: "An unusual manner of painting, all his own, surpassing almost everyone," on Hals's painting methods. For that matter, schematic painting was not Hals's own idea (the approach already existed in 16th century Italy), and Hals was probably inspired by Flemish contemporaries, Rubens and Van Dyck, in his painting method. Haarlem resident Theodorus Schrevelius was struck by the vitality of Hals's portraits which reflected 'such power and life' that the painter 'seems to challenge nature with his brush'.
Influence
thumb|[[Laughing Cavalier, 1624, canvas, relined, (H) 83 cm x (W) 67 cm, Wallace Collection, London.]]
thumb|Boy with a lute [[The Metropolitan Museum of Art]]
Frans influenced his brother Dirck Hals (born at Haarlem, 1591–1656), who was also a painter. Additionally, five of his sons became painters:
- Harmen Hals (1611–1669)
- Frans Hals the Younger (1618–1669)
- Jan Hals (1620–1654)
- Reynier Hals (1627–1672)
- Nicolaes Hals (1628–1686)
Though most of his sons became portrait painters, some of them took up still-life painting or architectural studies and landscapes. Still lifes formerly attributed to his son Frans II have since been re-attributed to other painters, however. Hals painted a young woman reaching into a basket in a still life market scene by Claes van Heussen.
Other contemporary painters who took inspiration from Hals were, with the main cities they were based in:
- Jan Miense Molenaer (1609–1668), Haarlem and Amsterdam
- Judith Leyster (wife of Molenaer, 1609–1660), Haarlem and Amsterdam
- Adriaen van Ostade (1610–1685), Haarlem
- Adriaen Brouwer (1605–1638), mostly Antwerp
- Johannes Cornelisz Verspronck (1597–1662), Haarlem
- Bartholomeus van der Helst (1613–1670), Amsterdam
- Cornelis de Bie (1621–1664), Amsterdam
Hals had a large workshop in Haarlem and many students, though 19th century biographers questioned some of his pupils, since their painting styles were so dissimilar to Hals. In his De Groote Schouburgh (1718–21), Arnold Houbraken mentions Philips Wouwerman, Adriaen Brouwer, Pieter Gerritsz van Roestraten, Adriaen van Ostade and Dirck van Delen as students. Vincent Laurensz van der Vinne was also a student, according to his diary with notes left by his son Laurens Vincentsz van der Vinne. Roestraten was not only a student (the Haarlem archives contain a notarised document, which supports this fact), but he also became a son-in-law of Hals when he married his daughter Adriaentje. The Haarlem portrait painter, Johannes Verspronck, one of about 10 competing portraitists in Haarlem at the time, possibly studied for some time with Hals.
In terms of style, the closest to Hals's work is the handful of paintings that are ascribed to Judith Leyster, which she often signed. She also 'qualifies' as a possible student, as does her husband, the painter Jan Miense Molenaer.
In the 19th century, his technique influenced the work of impressionists and realists including Claude Monet, Édouard Manet, Charles-François Daubigny, Max Liebermann, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Gustave Courbet, and in the Netherlands, Jacobus van Looy and Isaac Israëls. Lovis Corinth named Hals as his biggest influence.
The Post-Impressionist artist Vincent van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo: 'What a joy it is to see a Frans Hals, how different it is from the paintings – so many of them – where everything is carefully smoothed out in the same manner.' Hals chose not to give a smooth finish to his painting, as most of his contemporaries did, but mimicked the vitality of his subject by using smears, lines, spots, large patches of color and hardly any details.
Legacy
thumb|left|upright|[[Malle Babbe, . Oil on canvas, 75 cm by 64 cm. Staatliche Museen, Berlin.]]
The 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica has an article on Frans Hals by Paul George Konody, who observes: Hals's reputation waned after his death and for two centuries he was held in such poor esteem that some of his paintings, which are now among the proudest possessions of public galleries, were sold at auction for a few pounds or even shillings. The portrait of Johannes Acronius realized five shillings at the Enschede sale in 1786. The Portrait of Willem van Heythuysen at the Alte Pinakothek sold in 1800 for £4: 5s Dutch artists known to have admired Hals enough to make copies of his paintings include Cornelis van Noorde (1731–1795) and Wybrand Hendricks (1744–1831). Empress Catherine the Great (reigned 1762–1796) acquired ten Hals works for her collection. Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1732–1806) visited the Alte Pinakothek to copy Hals's work, and Hals's influence is apparent in Fragonard's portraits de fantaisie. Antoine Watteau (1684–1721) made study sketches after Hals. At the Royal Academy in London, Joshua Reynolds (1723–1792) lectured on Hals in 1774, praising his handling of faces and the consequent remarkable individuality of his portraits. Reynolds was less enthusiastic about Hals's characteristic loose finish, which he thought betrayed impatience. Subsequently, in 1781 Reynolds visited the Hals collection then at Haarlem City Hall (now at the Frans Hals Museum) and soon after bought two Hals works. Reynolds's biographer James Northcote (1736–1831), who was a fellow portraitist, remarked that Hals could have caught a bird in flight, grasping it, as it were, from life – something he said Titian would not have been capable of.
Starting at the middle of the 1860s his prestige rose again thanks to the efforts of critic Théophile Thoré-Bürger. With his rehabilitation in public esteem came the enormous rise in value, and, at the Secretan sale in 1889, the portrait of Pieter van den Broecke was bid up to 4,420 francs, while in 1908 the National Gallery paid £25,000 for the large family group from the collection of Baron Talbot de Malahide.
Hals's work remains admired, particularly with young painters who can find many lessons about practical technique from his unconcealed brushstrokes. Before 1913 they hung in the Haarlem City Hall, where Impressionists went to see them.
The Hals crater on Mercury is named in his honour.
Hals was pictured on the Netherlands' 10-guilder banknote of 1968.
The Banquet of the Officers of the St George Militia Company in 1616 appears on the restaurant wall in the 1989 Peter Greenaway film The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover.
thumb|[[The Banquet of the Officers of the St George Militia Company in 1627]]
thumb|[[The Officers of the St Adrian Militia Company in 1633]]
thumb|Regents of the St Elizabeth Hospital of Haarlem, 1641
<gallery widths="154" heights="188" perrow="4">
File:Frans Hals - Portret van Catharina Hooft en haar min.jpg|Catharina Hooft with her Nurse, 1619–1620
File:Family Portrait in a Landscape WGA.jpg|Family Portrait of Gijsbert Claesz van Campen in a Landscape,
File:Frans Hals - Three Children with a Goat Cart - WGA11064.jpg|Three Children with a Goat Cart,
File:Frans Hals - Portrait of a Man - Google Art Project (579097).jpg|Portrait of a Man, 1630
File:Hals Frans - Zaffius, Jacobus Hendricksz - Google Art Project.jpg|Jacobus Zaffius, 1611
File:Young Man and Woman in an Inn ("Yonker Ramp and His Sweetheart") MET DP145899.jpg|Yonker Ramp and His Sweetheart, 1623
File:Frans Hals - Portret van een stel in een landschap - Google Art Project.jpg|Married Couple in a Garden, 1622
File:Peeckelhaering WGA.jpg|Peeckelhaeringh, 1628–1630
File:Frans Hals 003.jpg|The Mulatto, 1627
File:Frans Hals - Portrait of a Man Holding a Skull.JPG|Portrait of a Man Holding a Skull,
File:Young Man with a Skull, Frans Hals, National Gallery, London.jpg|Young Man with a Skull, 1626–1628, National Gallery, London
File:Portrait of a Woman00.jpg|Portrait of a Woman, 1644
File:Frans Hals - The Merry Drinker - WGA11095.jpg|The Merry Drinker, 1628–1630
File:Frans Hals, Merrymakers at Shrovetide, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.jpg|Shrovetide Revellers,
File:Frans Hals - St Matthew - Museum of Western European and Oriental Art, Odessa.jpg|St Matthew,
File:Frans Hals - The Rommel Pot Player - WGA11057.jpg|The Rommel Pot Player, 1618–1622
File:Frans Hals 073.jpg|Two Singing Boys with a Lute and a Music Book,
File:Frans Hals 031.jpg|Portrait of Isaak Abrahamsz. Massa, 1626
File:Daniel van Aken (Frans Hals d.ä.) - Nationalmuseum - 18571.tif|Daniel van Aken
File:Frans Hals, Portrait of René Descartes (cleaned up).jpg|Portrait of René Descartes,
File:Hals Portrait of a Man.png|Portrait of a Man (about 1665), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (66.1054)
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Public collections (selection)
- Frans Hals Museum, Haarlem
- Frick Collection, New York City
- Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten Antwerpen
- Louvre, Paris
- Mauritshuis, The Hague
- Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
- Gemäldegalerie, Berlin
- Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam
- Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
- Rijksmuseum Amsterdam.
- Kenwood House
- Wallace Collection, London
See also
- List of paintings by Frans Hals
- Han van Meegeren
References
Further reading
- <!--Middle Dutch--> Frans Hals biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (1718) by Arnold Houbraken, courtesy of the Digital library for Dutch literature
- Seymour Slive: Frans Hals, 3 Volumes (oeuvre catalogue), New York / London 1970–1974
- Frans Hals (exhibition catalogue Washington/London/Haarlem, 1989.
- Claus Grimm published his Frans Hals. Das Gesamtwerk in 1989 (Stuttgart/Zürich; also translated into Dutch and English).
- N. Middelkoop and A. van Grevenstein, Frans Hals. Leven, werk, restauratie (Life, work and restorations) (Haarlem Amsterdam 1988). This work gives an account of restorations of the riflemen's pieces, but it also gives a picture of Hals's life and work.
- Antoon Erftemeijer (2004): Frans Hals in het Frans Hals Museum, Amsterdam/Gent (in Dutch, English and French), in which various chapters are devoted to Hals's life, his predecessors, portrait painting in the Golden Age, Hals's painting technique and other subjects. Many pictures with close-ups in this book show Hals's works in great detail.
- Christopher D. M. Atkins (2003): "Frans Hals's Virtuoso Brushwork", Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek, pp. 281–309). Parts of this article are excerpts of The Frans Hals Museum, Haarlem, July 2005 by Antoon Erftemeijer, Frans Hals Museum curator.
- Christopher D. M. Atkins (2012): The Signature Style of Frans Hals: Painting, Subjectivity, and the Market in Early Modernity, Amsterdam University Press.
- Henry R. Lew (2018): Imaging the World, Hybrid Publishers, Melbourne, Australia Chapter 9: Frans Hals, pages 108–126.
- Steven Nadler (2022): The Portraitist: Frans Hals and His World, The University of Chicago Press.
- Lelia Packer and Ashok Roy (2022): Frans Hals: The Male Portrait, The Wallace Collection.
External links
- Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem
- Frans Hals Works, Biography and Style
- The National Gallery
- The Wallace Collection
- Web Gallery of Art (large collection of pictures and extensive biography)
- Frans Hals at zeno.org
- Olga's Gallery
- Works and literature on Frans Hals
- Frans Hals in the Metropolitan Museum 2011 exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Walter Liedtke, "Frans Hals: Style and Substance" (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2011)
