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Boy with a Glass and a Lute

Painting by Frans Hals From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boy with a Glass and a Lute
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Boy with a Glass and a Lute is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Dutch Golden Age painter Frans Hals, painted in 1626 and now in the Guildhall Art Gallery, London.

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Painting

The painting shows a boy with a lute who is holding a glass above his head with his right hand; with his left hand, he balances a lute which rests on a table.

Name

In his 1910 catalog of Frans Hals works Hofstede de Groot wrote:

82. THE LAUGHING MANDOLINE-PLAYER. M. 214. A young man with long dishevelled hair sits holding up in his right hand a glass full of wine, at which he looks with a smile. His dark costume is trimmed with blue; his cap hangs on the back of his head, to the left. With his left hand he holds up one end of a mandoline, the other end of which rests on a table. Signed on the right with the monogram; panel, 36 inches by 30 inches. Exhibited at the Royal Academy Winter Exhibition, London, 1891, No. 72.[1]

Hals' positioning of a figure looking upwards was common to many of his genre paintings of the 1620s:

This painting is probably related to The Fingernail Test:

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See also

References

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