
Frans Hals
1591–1666 · Dutch Republic · Baroque
The story
Around 1585 a Protestant family fled Antwerp for Haarlem, in the young Dutch Republic, one of thousands of refugees pushed north by the war with Spain. Among the children was Frans Hals, who spent the rest of his working life painting the merchants, brewers and militia officers of that same booming town.
His breakthrough came in 1616, when Haarlem's Saint George civic guard commissioned him to paint its officers together, a group-portrait tradition Dutch cities used to honor the citizen-soldiers who had helped win their independence. Hals turned the usual stiff lineup into something that looked caught mid-toast, faces flushed, hands loose on sword hilts, built from quick, visible strokes instead of the smooth finish most portraitists favored. The style made him Haarlem's most sought-after painter for two decades, and centuries later painters including Edouard Manet studied that same loose brushwork as a model for catching a live moment on canvas.
Fashion moved on before he did. By the 1650s commissions had dried up, and in 1652 court records show him auctioning his furniture to cover a debt. He spent his final years on a small pension the Haarlem town council granted him in 1664, two years before his death, still painting occasional group portraits for the same kind of civic bodies that had first made his name.
Works
65 works
Portrait of an elderly ladyFrans Hals, 1633
Portrait of a womanFrans Hals, 1627
Portrait of a WomanFrans Hals, 1660
Portrait of a WomanFrans Hals, 1634
Portrait of a woman, possibly Maria LarpFrans Hals, 1634
Portrait of a Woman StandingFrans Hals, 1611
Portrait of Cornelia Claesdr VooghtFrans Hals, 1631
Portrait of Dorothea BerckFrans Hals, 1644
Portrait of Herman LangeliusFrans Hals, 1660
Portrait of Maria Bastiaens van HoutFrans Hals, 1643
Portrait of Maritje Claesdr VooghtFrans Hals, 1639
Portrait of Mrs. BodolpheFrans Hals, 1643
Portrait of Willem CoymansFrans Hals, 1645
The Officers of the St Adrian Militia Company in 1633Frans Hals, 1633
The Smoker, or Three HeadsFrans Hals, 1626