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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GUI-HAN |
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HALS, FRANS (158o?1666) , Dutch painter, was born at Antwerp according to the most recent
Corporation at Haarlem. But as a man he had failings. He so ill-treated his first wife, Anneke Hermansz,II that she died prematurely in 1616; and he barely saved the character of his second, Lysbeth Reyniers, by marrying her in 1617. Another defect was partiality to drink, which led him into low company. Still he brought up and supported a family of ten children with success till 1652, when the forced sale of his pictures and furniture, at the suit of a baker to whom he was indebted for bread and money, brought him to absolute penury. The inventory of the property seized on this occasion only mentions three mattresses and bolsters, an armoire, a table and five pictures. This humble list
annuity
Hals's pictures illustrate the various strata of society into which his misfortunes led him. His banquets or meetings of officers, of sharpshooters, and gildsmen are the most interesting of his works. But they are not more characteristic than his low-life pictures of itinerant players and singers. His portraits of gentlefolk are true and noble, but hardly so expressive as those of fishwives and tavern heroes. His first master at Antwerp was probably van Noort, as has been suggested by M. G. S. Davies
touch , but of touch on different keysRembrandt was the bass, Hals the treble. The latter is perhaps more expressive than the former. He seizes with rare intuition a moment in the life of his sitters. What nature displays in that moment he reproduces thoroughly in a very delicate scale of colour, and with a perfect mastery over every form of expression. He becomes so clever at last that exact tone, light and shade, and modelling are all obtained with a few marked and fluid strokes of the brush.In every form of his art we can distinguish his earlier style ,from that of later years. It is curious that we have no record of any work produced by him in the first decade of his independent activity, save an engraving by Jan van de Velde after a lost portrait of " The Minister Johannes Bogardus," who died in 1614. The earliest works by Frans Hals that have come down to us, " Two Boys Playing and Singing " in the gallery of Cassel, and a " Banquet of the officers of the `St Joris Doele' " or Arquebusiers of St George (1616) in the museum of Haarlem, exhibit him as a careful draughtsman capable of great finish, yet spirited withal. His flesh, less clear than it afterwards becomes, is pastose and burnished. Later he becomes more effective, displays more freedom of hand, and a greater command of effect. At this period we note the beautiful full-length of " Madame van Beresteyn " at the Louvre in Paris, and a splendid full-length portrait of " Willem van Heythuysen " leaning on a sword in the Liechtenstein collection at Vienna. Both these pictures are equalled by the other" Banquet of the officers, of the Arquebusiers of St George " (with different portraits) and the " Banquet of the officers of the ` Cloveniers , Doelen ' " or Arquebusiers of St Andrew of 1627 and an " Assembly of the officers of the Arquebusiers of St Andrew " of 1633 in the Haarlem Museum. A picture of the same kind in the town hall
Asa portrait painter Frans Hals had scarcely the psychological insight of a Rembrandt or Velazquez, though in a few works, like the " Admiral de Ruyter," in Earl
Spencer
hall
Though a visit to Haarlem town hall, which contains the five enormous Doelen groups and the two Regenten pictures, is as necessary for the student of Hals's art as a visit to the Prado in Madrid is for the student of Velazquez, good examples of the Dutch master have found their way into most of the leading public and private collections. In the British Isles, besides the works already mentioned, portraits from his brush are to be found at the National Gallery, the Edinburgh Gallery, the Glasgow Corporation Gallery, Hampton Court, Buckingham Palace, Devonshire House, and the collections of Lord Northbrooke, Lord Ellesmere, Lord Iveagh and Lord Spencer
At Amsterdam is the celebrated " Flute Player," once in the Dupper collection at Dort; at Brussels, the patrician "Heythuysen "; at the Louvre, " Descartes "; at Dresden, the painter " Van der Vinne." Hals's sitters were taken from every class of societyadmirals, generals and burgomasters pairing with merchants, lawyers, clerks. To register all that we find in public galleries would involve much space. There are eight portraits at Berlin, six at Cassel, five at St Petersburg
For two centuries after his death Frans Hals 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," now at the Berlin Museum, realized five shillings at the Enschede sale in 1786. The splendid portrait of the man with the sword at the Liechtenstein gallery was sold in 'Soo for 4, 5s. With his rehabilitation in public esteem came the enormous rise in values, and, at the Secretan sale in 1889, the portrait of " Pieter van de Broecke d'Anvers " was bid up to 4420, while in 1908 the National Gallery paid 25,000 for the large group from the collection of Lord Talbot de Malahide. Of the master's numerous family none has left a name except FRANS HALS THE YOUNGER, born about 1622, who died in 1669. His pictures represent cottages and poultry; and the " Vanitas " at Berlin, a table laden with gold and silver dishes, cups, glasses and books, is one of his finest works and deserving of a passing glance. Quite in another form, and with much of the freedom of the elder Hals, DIRK HALS, his brother (born at Haarlem, died 1656), is a painter of festivals and bali-rooms. But Dirk had too much of the freedom and too little of the skill in drawing which characterized his brother. He remains second on his own ground to Palamedes. A fair specimen of his art is a " Lady playing a Harpsichord to a Young Girl and her Lover " in the van der Hoop collection at Amsterdam, now in the Ryks Museum. More characteristic, but not better, is a large company of gentle-folk rising from dinner, in the Academy at Vienna. End of Article: HALS, FRANS (158o?1666) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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