The portraitist Frans Hals and his world

Steven M. Nadler, 1958-

Book - 2022

"In the seventeenth century some of the most advanced painting in Europe was produced in the Netherlands. Rembrandt dominated the radical progress of painting in Amsterdam, and Vermeer did so in Delft. Frans Hals led the vanguard in Haarlem where he painted some of the most animated, individualized portraits of the era, or of any era, for that matter. Now, Steven Nadler has produced the first biography of this elusive Dutch artist to be published in many years. Hals left behind no letters or other personal papers, though luckily a wealth of other sources offer details of his life and personality. Nadler has fleshed out Hals's biography by casting it against the drama of Holland's revolution against Spanish rule, the acute str...uggles between Protestantism and Catholicism in the Low Countries, and the rise of Holland as a colonial power and center of industry and commerce. The result is an authoritative picture of Hals and life in his studio and a robust work of seventeenth-century social and cultural history. Nadler serves up the sights, smells, and sounds of life in Haarlem. He takes us into cloth factories, taverns, busy studios, and bustling markets. He takes us behind the scenes of the picture trade. He leads us along the newly invented shorelines where weavers laid out large, billowing lengths of cloth to bleach in the sun. He takes us into new Protestant churches and into old Catholic ones. We witness the bloody politics of the long Reformation and the 1635 plague that devastated the Dutch Republic. What emerges is a deftly written story of a complex artist and the tumultuous world he inhabited. Accented with images of life in seventeenth-century Holland and a color gallery of works by Hals and his peers, The Portraitist is a work of great charm and importance and will stand as the first full biography of one of Europe's most important artists for many years"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
History
Published
Chicago ; London : The University of Chicago Press 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Steven M. Nadler, 1958- (author)
Physical Description
365 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some colour), portraits ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 325-345) and index.
ISBN
9780226698366
  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction
  • 1. Exile
  • 2. Haarlem
  • 3. Master Painter
  • 4. Citizen Hals
  • 5. In a Rough Manner
  • 6. "Very Boldly Done after Life"
  • 7. Debts and Disputes
  • 8. Pandemics
  • 9. "A Pleasing, Good and Sincere Peace"
  • 10. Denouement
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • References
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

The 17th-century artist Frans Hals (c. 1581/84--1666) has traditionally been considered one of the lesser stars of the Dutch Republic's Golden Age of painting, perhaps because Hals specialized in portraiture rather than in history painting, as Rembrandt did, or in exquisite genre paintings like Vermeer's. Yet as Nadler argues, no one created portraits that were more engaging or interactive. Who, then, was this artist behind the portraits? Little documentary evidence remains; thus, in piecing together the artist's life story, Nadler relies chiefly on church and, especially, legal records, for Hals was regularly in debt. Nadler savvily expands on this evidence by creating a portrait of the Netherlandish world in which Hals lived and worked. The resulting book is stylistically much like a portrait by the master: broadly sweeping strokes situate the geopolitical context and are embellished by microhistorical details relating to the art market and to Hals's family and his patrons. The paintings serve as focal points along the way. Though much about Hals's life remains unknown, Nadler's portrait of the age in which he worked is clearly and astutely evoked. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. --Julia K. Dabbs, University of Minnesota--Morris

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

While Frans Hals did not leave us diaries or letters, he did leave something of competing importance: his unique and identifiable art. Nadler uses Hals' portraits, as well as church and civic records, to piece together a biography of this enigmatic artist. A master painter, Hals developed a unique and influential style over the course of 50 years. Nadler is able to fill in the blank space and give the reader an accessible and convincing account of Hals' life, supported by images of his paintings and contrasted with examples from his contemporaries, including Rubens and Rembrandt. The Portraitist offers a broad history of the seventeenth-century art capital, Haarlem, as seen through the eyes of a working painter. Framed by the religious upheavals of the era, situated solidly in the art world of the Dutch Republic, and defining Hals' accomplishments, Nadler's accessible and convincing portrait presents a politically pliant and religiously ambiguous man with loose narrative brushstrokes similar to those used by the genius himself.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

A deal is a deal, or so thought the officers of the Saint George civic guard company of Amsterdam's District 11. They wanted a portrait of themselves to commemorate their service to the city, as was customary. It had to be dignified, reflecting their virtues as brave and responsible citizens, but without being stuffy and formal, like the old civic guard portraits. In those earlier group paintings, everyone appeared in the same stiff pose, and they all looked so much alike it was hard to tell one person from another. No, these leading men of the great city of Amsterdam wanted something lively and colorful to hang in their headquarters--something modern. Ordinarily, Amsterdam civic guards hired Amsterdam painters for such an important commission. The Saint George officers, however, broke with tradition. They went beyond the city limits and sought out a celebrated master painter from Haarlem. The terms of the agreement were clear: the artist was to come to Amsterdam on a regular basis, and the sixteen guardsmen would take turns posing for him in a borrowed studio. He was to be paid sixty guilders per figure. Everything should have gone smoothly. Travel from Haarlem to Amsterdam was relatively easy now that there was a canal between the two cities. The painter could take a barge or go by land along the tow path. Overnight stays in Amsterdam would be necessary, but not too much of an inconvenience. Moreover, this was an experienced painter of civic guard portraits; he had already completed three of them for Haarlem companies and was about to start work on his fourth. He could give the Amsterdam militiamen just what they were looking for, since what they were looking for was just what they had seen in his paintings. In the end, though, it did not work out well. Things took a bad turn when, after a number of sessions in Amsterdam and making good progress on the large canvas, the painter suddenly stopped coming to the city. He refused to leave his Haarlem home and studio. It was too much trouble, he complained, and his lodgings in Amsterdam were costing him a lot of money for which he was not getting reimbursed. If they wanted the painting finished, they would have to come to him. That was certainly not the arrangement, the officers argued as they filed the first of several legal complaints against him. He could not possibly expect all of them to travel to Haarlem. Come to Amsterdam and finish the painting, they demanded, or they would have another artist finish it. Still hopeful that they could persuade the painter to resume his work, they sweetened the pot and offered him an additional six guilders per figure. By 1637, four years after the commission, negotiations had broken down completely. Much to the dismay of the Amsterdam guardsmen, Frans Hals would not budge. He was leaving more than a thousand guilders on the table, a significant amount of money for any seventeenth-century artist but especially for a man with financial problems. But he could not afford to be away from Haarlem so often, or so he said--he had apprentices to supervise, other projects to attend to, and a family to care for. He called their bluff. Let someone else finish the damn painting. It was not the first time that a brilliant but stubborn and irascible artist had aggravated a client--Michelangelo famously caused splitting headaches for the popes he served (and vice versa)--nor would it be the last; Rembrandt, a contemporary of Hals, was a difficult character, and Picasso was best avoided when he was in "one of his moods." We do not know how typical such behavior was for Hals. But one thing is certain: never again would a commission from an Amsterdam civic guard company come his way. This book offers a portrait of one of the greatest portrait painters in history. The name of Frans Hals may not be as familiar as other marquee names of early modern art, especially the outstanding portraitists of the seventeenth century: Velázquez, Rubens, Van Dyck, and Rembrandt. And yet, those who have seen Hals's work in museums or in art history books will immediately recognize his style. Whether or not they know of Hals, they know "Hals"--that rough, loose brushwork, not unlike what we find in later Impressionist paintings, that when viewed up close seems like nothing but abstract daubings, but when seen from a distance so beautifully captures the well-to- do citizens of the Dutch "Golden Age." It is a style like none other in the period. Rembrandt, of course, put his own mark on portraiture with a painterly manner that grew coarser over the years. One contemporary critic--the painter Gérard de Lairesse, whose portrait Rembrandt did late in his own life--complained that the paint in Rembrandt's works "runs down the piece like shit [ drek ]." Hals and Rembrandt were likely working side by side in the same Amsterdam workshop for a brief time, and no doubt Rembrandt was impressed by what Hals, his elder by almost twenty years, was doing with paint on his panels and canvases. But there is no mistaking a Hals for a Rembrandt. Hals may have painted in what was by then a well-established tradition, but he had an approach to rendering sitters that was all his own. Over the course of a long career, more than fifty years as a master konstschilder (fine art painter), Hals changed people's ideas and expectations as to what portraiture can do--indeed, what a painting should look like. A portrait by Hals, with its visible brushstrokes and bold execution, might lack fine detail and a smooth finish, but it more than made up for this with a sense of the sitter's animated presence, captured with unprecedented energy and immediacy. Some dismissed his works as "sloppy" and "unfinished." For others, they were fresh and cutting-edge. Connoisseurs or collectors--the Dutch called them liefhebbers ; the term, derived from the word for love and used for art lovers generally, could also be translated as "amateur" (which comes from the Latin amator , lover) but without the pejorative sense (in contrast with "expert") it often carries today--sought him out for portraits that they could proudly hang on the walls of their homes and boardrooms and impress visitors with their cultivated taste. To his contemporaries, in Haarlem and beyond, Hals was, for several decades at least, the modern painter par excellence. Excerpted from The Portraitist: Frans Hals and His World by Steven Nadler All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.