Frans Hals, Married Couple in a Garden: Portrait of Isaac Massa
and Beatrix van der Laen. 1622, Rijksmuseum
I
will write a few posts about pictures I enjoyed during our recent trip to
Europe.
What
better way to remember your wedding than to have a picture of it? In Haarlem in the early 17th
century, a painting was the only picture available. If you were lucky, and Frans Hals was a friend, your wedding
portrait would survive 400 years and thousands would stand before the portrait
every week and remember your wedding.
Isaac
(1586 – 1642) was a wealthy grain merchant, diplomat and author from Haarlem,
now a short train ride from Amsterdam.
As was usual among his fellow Dutch merchants, his business was the
commodity trade with the Baltic countries, especially, for Isaac, Russia and
Sweden. Though he might have taken
a flutter from time to time on the risky colonial trade with the East and West
Indies, timber, grain and such were the cash flow.
Isaac
had spent the better part of the last 20 years in Moscow and elsewhere in
Russia. He’s published up-to-date
information about the country and its troubled politics. He’s a leading merchant, active in
politics.
Beatrix
was born in 1592 and died in 1639.
The
happy, relaxed couple sits in a garden; I can’t help smiling when I look at
them. The 30 year old bride maybe
about to giggle; no bride could be more pleased with herself. And well she might be! The average age of marriage in
Amsterdam in the early 17th c. was 20 to 24. Her brothers have despaired of their 30
year old sister being anything but an old maid – they don’t want to support
her. But look! she has landed one
of the most eligible bachelors in Haarlem. Also, check out that ring he bought her! Beatrix makes sure you won’t miss it. *
Hals
has placed the couple in a garden.
The couple sits close together, as intimate as their voluminous formal
dress will allow. He seems to love his wife; his left arm must be around her
waist. A thistle grows at
Isaac’s feet, a symbol of male fertility; ivy grows around them, a symbol of
enduring love. Both plants, once
established, are hard to uproot.
To their left is a pleasure garden, and in it a statue of a Greek
goddess, two couples, and a pair of peacocks.
I
believe they sit under an oak tree, which seems to be a symbol of just about
anything, but endurance and strength are found in both Roman and Celtic
traditions.
Contemporaries
labeled Hals’ technique a “rough style.”
He painted with broad, rushed strokes. The strokes are clearly visible. His paintings do not have the polished, satiny finish of his
contemporary Vermeer. He painted quickly and could finish a work in a few days.
The astonishing ruffle Beatrix wears is not painted with the care and detail
other painters might have used.
Isaac looks like he’s going to slide off the bench, or fall off the
side. I’m also uneasy with
Beatrix’s smile: she’s smug, she’s
happy, but the expression is a bit off, almost an embarrassed grin. Was Hals painting fast and not
interested in details?
Hals
was very popular; he seems to have been the first choice among the Haarlem
elite. His paintings are
everywhere: portraits of rich
burgers and their wives and daughters, single men setting out in life, genre
pictures of singers, bar hounds and women of easy virtue, huge paintings of civic
groups and militias: people, always people, and almost
always the people he knew, the people of Haarlem. Sadly, he
outlived his popularity and was a bankrupt shortly before he died.
*Jane
Austen would not have approved:
she ridicules Lydia for flashing her wedding ring to the neighbors: “we (Lydia & Wickham) overtook William Goulding in his curricle, so I
was determined he should know it (that I was married), and so I let down the
side-glass next to him, and took off my glove, and let my hand just rest upon
the window frame, so that he might see the ring, and then I bowed and smiled
like any thing."
Elizabeth
could bear it no longer. She got up, and ran out of the room.
1 comment:
Isaac's left fist rests on his hip - see the cuff of his sleeve? Is this a bridal portrait? Or maybe painted later in their marriage? Beatrix' hands look work-worn or arthritic (prominent knuckles). What's the size of the painting? In any case, a very happy painting!
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