Musical Party in a Hall | |
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Artist | Pieter de Hooch |
Year | 1663-1665 |
Dimensions | 72 cm × 85 cm (28 in × 33 in) |
Location | Museum der bildenden Künste, Leipzig |
Musical Party in a Hall (c. 1663-1665) is an oil on canvas painting by the Dutch painter Pieter de Hooch. It is an example of Dutch Golden Age painting and is now in the Museum der bildenden Künste.
This painting was documented by Hofstede de Groot in 1908, who wrote; "126. THE MUSIC-PARTY. deG. 34. On the left in a large hall, the left-hand portion of which is represented, sit three persons at a table covered with an Ispahan carpet, upon which are some oranges. One gentleman plays the 'cello, another the flute, while a lady sings. The flute-player sits on the extreme left behind the table, wearing a slouch hat. The 'cello-player sits to the right of the table, in full view of the spectator ; he has long curls, and wears knee-breeches and a pink doublet with slashed sleeves over a white shirt with broad cuffs. He raises a glass with his left hand and holds his bow with his right. He looks at the lady sitting at his right ; she has her music-book in her lap, and wears a greenish bodice and a yellow silk skirt. Between the two men is a boy, and behind him a couple. From the right comes a little dog. At the back of the hall a flight of stone steps goes up through a door. A second door on the right shows a well-lighted room, in which a young couple stand. Above these doors a copy of Raphael's "School of Athens" is let into the wall. According to Dr. W. Bode, the picture dates from about 1662 to 1665. Canvas, 32 inches by 27 inches. Described by Ch. Blanc, Le Tresor de la Curiosite, ii. 262. Sales. Pierre de Grand Pre, Paris, February 16, 1809 (2620 -francs, Paillet). James, London, 1892 (Thieme). In the collection of the late A. Thieme at Leipzig, No. 45 in the 1900 catalogue ; see the introduction by Dr. W. Bode, p. 32."
The large hall, the left-hand portion of which described here is a gallery of the main hall of the (then) Amsterdam City Hall (today the Royal Palace of Amsterdam). The painting at the back is a fantasized version of the School of Athens by Raphael, but in reality another painting was installed. The gallery is possibly the one in the southeast corner near the registry office for weddings, as there are three couples represented. Possibly the doorway on the right is meant to be the registry office itself.