Jan Steen
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Jan Steen | |
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Self portrait (1670)
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Born | Jan Havickszoon Steen c. 1626 Leiden, Holland, Dutch Republic |
Died | buried 3 February 1679 (aged 52–53) Leiden, Holland, Dutch Republic |
Nationality | Dutch |
Education | Nicolaes Knupfer, Adriaen van Ostade, Jan van Goyen |
Known for | Painting |
Movement | Dutch Golden Age painting |
Jan Havickszoon Steen (c. 1626 – buried 3 February 1679) was a Dutch Golden Age painter, one of the leading genre painters of the 17th century. His works are known for their psychological insight, sense of humour and abundance of colour.[1]
Contents
Life
Steen was born in Leiden, a town in Southern Holland, where his well-to-do, Catholic family were brewers[2] who ran the tavern The Red Halbert for two generations. Steen's father even leased him a brewery of his own in Delft from the years 1654 until 1657. He was the eldest of eight or more children. Like his even more famous contemporary Rembrandt van Rijn, Jan Steen attended the Latin school and became a student in Leiden. Though no official records of Steen's artistic training are preserved, contemporary sources tell us he received his painterly education from three men, Nicolaes Knupfer (1603–1660), a German painter of historical and figurative scenes in Utrecht, Adriaen van Ostade, and Jan van Goyen, who would later become his father-in-law.[3] Influences of Knupfer can be found in Steen's use of composition and colour. Another source of inspiration was Isaac van Ostade, a painter of rural scenes, who lived in Haarlem.
In 1648 Jan Steen and Gabriël Metsu founded the painters' Guild of Saint Luke at Leiden. Soon after he became an assistant to the renowned landscape painter Jan van Goyen (1596–1656), and moved into his house on the Bierkade in The Hague. On Oct 3, 1649 he married van Goyen's daughter[2] Margriet, with whom he would have eight children. Steen worked with his father-in-law until 1654, when he moved to Delft, where he ran the brewery De Slang ("The Snake") for three years without much success.[4] After the explosion in Delft in 1654 the art market was depressed, but Steen painted A Burgomaster of Delft and his daughter.[5] It does not seem to be clear if this painting should be called a portrait or a genre work.
Steen lived in Warmond, just north of Leiden, from 1656 till 1660 and in Haarlem from 1660 till 1670 and in both periods he was especially productive. In 1670, after the death of his wife in 1669 and his father in 1670, Steen moved back to Leiden, where he stayed the rest of his life. When the art market collapsed in 1672, called the Year of Disaster, Steen opened a tavern. In April 1673 he married Maria van Egmont, who gave him another child. In 1674 he became president of the Saint Luke's Guild. Frans van Mieris (1635- 1681) became one of his drinking companions. He died in Leiden in 1679 and was interred in a family grave in the Pieterskerk.[6]
Influences
Connection with the Rederijkers
In 1945, Sturla Gudlaugsson, a specialist in Dutch seventeenth-century painting and iconography and Director of the Netherlands Institute for Art History and the Mauritshuis in The Hague, wrote The Comedians in the work of Jan Steen and his Contemporaries, which revealed that a major influence on Jan Steen's work was the guild of the Rhetoricians or Rederijkers and their theatrical endeavors.
It is often suggested that Jan Steen's paintings are a realistic portrayal of Dutch 17th-century life. However, not everything he did was a purely realistic representation of his day-to-day environment. Many of his scenes contain idyllic and bucolic fantasies and a declamatory emphasis redolent of theater.[7]
Jan Steen's connection to theater is easily verifiable through his connection to the Rederijkers. There are two kinds of evidence for this connection. First, Jan Steen Steen's uncle belonged to the Rhetoricians in Leiden, where Steen was born and lived a substantial part of his life. Second, Jan Steen portrayed many scenes from the lives of the Rederijkers, an example being the painting Rhetoricians at a Window of 1658–65.[8] The piece is currently held in the Philadelphia Museum of Art which was established in February 1876. The humanity, humour and optimism of the figures suggest that Jan Steen knew these men well, and wanted to portray them positively.
Theater
With his lavish and moralising style, it is logical that Steen would employ the stratagems from theater for his purposes. There is conclusive evidence that the characters in Steen's paintings are predominantly theatrical characters and not ones from reality.
Steen's numerous paintings of a theme most commonly entitled The Doctor's Visit, such as the composition of 1665–70 in the Rijksmuseum, illustrate his theatrical approach. The story is simple: a doctor attending a young maiden discovers that she is not ill but is in fact pregnant with child. The doctor is a comical character who wears a biretta, a doublet and a small pleated ruff. In fact, he is dressed in the fashion of 1570, not 1670. In contrast, the girl wears what would be the height of fashion at the time of the painting, a Japanese-styled loose kimono robe.
This anachronism can be explained only one way: this is not a real doctor but an actor wearing a traditional theater costume. According to Gudlaugsson, “never would so unusual and so completely uncontemporary a costume occur as that of the doctors in [Steen's] work".[9]
Works
Daily life was Jan Steen's main pictorial theme. Many of the genre scenes he portrayed, as in The Feast of Saint Nicholas, are lively to the point of chaos and lustfulness, even so much that "a Jan Steen household", meaning a messy scene, became a Dutch proverb (een huishouden van Jan Steen). Subtle hints in his paintings seem to suggest that Steen meant to warn the viewer rather than invite him to copy this behaviour. Many of Steen's paintings bear references to old Dutch proverbs or literature. He often used members of his family as models, and painted quite a few self-portraits in which he showed no tendency to vanity.
Steen did not shy from other themes: he painted historical, mythological and religious scenes, portraits, still lifes and natural scenes. His portraits of children are famous. He is also well known for his mastery of light and attention to detail, most notably in Persian rugs and other textiles.
Steen was prolific, producing about 800 paintings, of which roughly 350 survive. His work was valued much by contemporaries and as a result he was reasonably well paid for his work. He did not have many students—only Richard Brakenburgh is recorded[10]—but his work proved a source of inspiration for many painters.
In the two paintings, The way you hear it and As old men sing, so children squeal, six of the people are identical in person and pose, and their spatial relationship is similar.
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A Burgomaster of Delft and his daughter, 1654, Rijksmuseum
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Skittles Players Outside an Inn, 1660, National Gallery
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Jan Steen, The Card Players in an Interior.jpg
The Card Players in an Interior, c. 1660, Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Collection
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Marriage of Tobias and Sarah, circa 1660, Museum Bredius
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The lute player, 1660, Rijksmuseum Twenthe
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La Toilette, 1659–1660, Rijksmuseum
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Twelfth-Night Feast - Jan Steen - MFA.jpg
Twelfth-Night Feast, 1662, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (54.102)
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Jan Steen - Fantasy Interior with Jan Steen and the Family of Gerrit Schouten - Google Art ProjectFXD.jpg
Fantasy Interior with Jan Steen and the Family of Gerrit Schouten, 1663, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
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Beware of Luxury, 1663, Kunsthistorisches Museum
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The Doctor's Visit c. 1665, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
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The Feast of Saint Nicholas, c. 1665–1668, Rijksmuseum
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The way you hear it, circa 1665, Mauritshuis
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Comme les vieux chantent, les enfants piaillent.jpg
As old men sing, so children squeal, 1662, Musée Fabre
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The Merry Family, 1668, Rijksmuseum
Sources
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- ↑ Liedtke, W. A., Plomp, M., Rüger, A., Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.), & National Gallery (Great Britain). (2001). Vermeer and the Delft school. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 202. ISBN 0870999737.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Liedtke, W. A., Plomp, M., Rüger, A., Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.), & National Gallery (Great Britain). (2001). Vermeer and the Delft school. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 343. ISBN 0870999737.
- ↑ Gudlaugsson, S. (1945). The Comedians in the work of Jan Steen and his Contemporaries, p.8.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Gudlaugsson, S. (1945). The Comedians in the work of Jan Steen and his Contemporaries, p.14.
- ↑ Liedtke, W. (2007). Dutch Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, p. 836.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. |
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- Paintings by Jan Steen at the Art UK site
- Jan Steen at the National Gallery of Art
- Jan Steen's Cat Paintings
- Olga Gallery
- Web Gallery of art
- Artcyclopedia entry with many links
- Works and literature on Jan Steen
- Vermeer and The Delft School, a full text exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, which contains material on Jan Steen
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- Pages with broken file links
- Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica with Wikisource reference
- Articles with short description
- Articles with hCards
- 1626 births
- 1679 deaths
- Dutch genre painters
- Dutch Golden Age painters
- Dutch male painters
- Artists from Leiden
- Burials at Pieterskerk, Leiden
- Members of the Leiden Guild of Saint Luke
- Members of the Haarlem Guild of Saint Luke