item details
Overview
Adriaen van Ostade (1610-85) was a major Dutch Golden Age artist. He probably trained in Frans Hals's Haarlem workshop, where the subject matter of fellow student Adriaen Brouwer, master of delicately painted boors carousing, determined Van Ostade's own themes. In his early work, Van Ostade depicted scenes of peasants engaged in debauchery using Rembrandt's forceful
After Rembrandt, Van Ostade was the major Dutch printmaker of his day, producing 50 recorded etchings, and is well represented in Te Papa's collection. His prints were highly regarded by his contemporaries and remained enduringly popular long after his death and went through a number of editions.
This etching shows the dramatic possibilities of chiaroscuro (light and dark) offered by the medium. Four figures are placed by a window, looking outside. One of them, the woman, is singing from her song sheet, the second is a man who holds a candle to assist, and a tthird - another man - is a closely engaged onlooker who may join in. A fourth figure is plunged in darkness. The window radically divides the figures, adding to the effectiveness of the composition and perhaps, more subtly, to the gentle comedy of the scene.
See: The J. Paul Getty Museum, 'Adriaen van Ostade', http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/artists/460/adriaen-van-ostade-dutch-1610-1685/
Dr Mark Stocker Curator, Historical International Art March 2019