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Dutch painter and
printmaker of the Baroque period known for his genre pictures of Dutch
peasant life. He also did religious subjects, portraits, and landscapes.
Van Ostade was a prolific artist, executing his small-scale works in oil,
usually on wood panels. He also worked in watercoour, did spirited pen
drawings, and produced about 50 etchings. His works won him much popularity
during his lifetime, and in 1662 he was made president of the Haarlem
painters' guild.
Ostade and the
Flemish genre painter Adriaen Brouwer may have been pupils of
Frans Hals
about 1627, although Hals's style was not a major influence on either
of them. There is a much closer resemblance between the paintings of the
two young artists than between their pictures and those of any older master.
Brouwer was the most important influence in shaping Ostade's style. Like
Brouwer, Ostade delighted in scenes of low peasant life, such as tavern
brawls, usually in dimly lit interiors with a single source of light illuminating
a principal group, as in Carousing Peasants in an Interior (c. 1635; Alte
Pinakothek, Munich). He treated these themes with a broad and vigorous
technique in a subdued range of colours that often borders on monochrome
and used a considerable element of caricature to underline the coarseness
of his peasant types. Ostade's colour schemes in his early period (1630s)
are largely confined to a range of neutral bluish-grays and browns, sometimes
enlivened by a single note of bright colour. From the 1640s on, he gradually
adopted a brighter palette, and his subjects, still mostly from peasant
life, tend to become less ribald and grotesque. In the works of his maturity
(1650-70) are found more outdoor settings, such as peasants by a cottage
door or figures making merry outside an inn, e.g., The Itinerant Fiddler
(1672; Mauritshuis, The Hague).
Ostade was successful,
popular, and much imitated. He was probably the teacher of the genre painter
Jan Steen.
Works
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