Laughing Boy with a Flute explained

Laughing Boy with a Flute
Artist:Frans Hals
Catalogue:Seymour Slive, Catalog 1974: #59
Material:Oil on panel
Height Metric:37.3
Width Metric:37.3
Height Imperial:15
Width Imperial:15
City:Schwerin
Museum:Staatliches Museum Schwerin
Accession:G2475

Laughing boy with a flute is an oil-on-panel painting by the Dutch Golden Age painter Frans Hals, painted in 1626 and now in the Staatliches Museum Schwerin, Schwerin.

Painting

The painting shows a boy with a flute with his head at an angle facing the viewer.

Provenance

In his 1910 catalog of Frans Hals works Hofstede de Groot wrote: "32. A LAUGHING BOY WITH A FLUTE. B. 118 ; M. 230. Half-length ; life size, almost in full face. The line of the shoulders rises to the left. The head is also almost in full face, but slightly inclined to the left. The long hair falls down, but a lock dangles just above the right shoulder. The eyes look at the spectator. The left hand holds a flute. Light-grey background. Broadly painted. The ground shows through the paint. A life-like rendering. [Pendant to 11.] Circular panel, 15 inches across. In the Schwerin Museum, 1882 catalogue, No. 444"[1]

This painting is a pendant to Boy with a glass and a pewter jug and the pair has long been considered to be part of a series on the five senses, where this one symbolizes hearing and the drinking boy symbolizes taste:

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.org/stream/catalogueraisonn03hofsuoft#page/12/mode/1up Hofstede de Groot