A Mother's Duty Explained

A Mother's Duty
Artist:Pieter de Hooch
Year:1658–1660
Material:Oil on canvas
Height Metric:52.5
Width Metric:61
City:Amsterdam
Museum:Amsterdam Museum on loan to the Rijksmuseum
Url:Amsterdam Collection online

A Mother's Duty (1658–1660) is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Dutch painter Pieter de Hooch. It is part of the collection of the Amsterdam Museum, on loan to the Rijksmuseum.

Description

This painting by Hooch showing a woman delousing a child's hair was documented by Hofstede de Groot in 1910, who wrote:

71. MOTHER COMBING HER CHILD'S HAIR. Sm. 33, 4, 67; de G. 5.[1] In a homely bedroom sits a woman in profile to the right. She wears a red blouse and blue skirt, and is de-lousing her daughter's hair who kneels before her with her head in her lap. Behind her is an elevated, recessed bed with curtains; a child's chair stands in the right foreground. The door on the left, near which is a little dog, opens into a second room, through the door of which is seen a garden with slender trees.[2] This is one of the finest pictures by De Hooch in Holland. [Compare 74.] Signed on the chair "Pr d' hooch"; canvas on panel, 21 inches by 24 inches. Wrongly attributed to E. Boursse in the 1887 catalogue of the Rijksmuseum ; the signature is absolutely genuine, and is wrongly described as doubtful in the 1905 catalogue.

Gallery

This painting seems to have been a successful design for De Hooch as there are several variations on the subject of this bedroom and its doorway outside:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.org/stream/catalogueraisonn01hofsuoft#page/569/mode/1up Comparative table
  2. "Transcendence in Ordinary Domestic Life", Wall Street Journal, August 19, 2017
  3. https://archive.org/stream/catalogueraisonn01hofsuoft#page/495/mode/1up entry 71 for Mother Combing her Child's Hair