Jan Steen

Village Fair

664 detail signatuur
664 achterzijde
664 ingelijst
664 voorzijde
664 voorzijde

Jan Steen
Village Fair

Non visible

Vers le haut


A quacksalver wearing a tall black hat stands on a podium and hawks his services at a crowded village fair. He has just pulled a tooth, and the patient in question leaves the podium, stumbling down the steps at right. The quack is accompanied by a masked comedian, two monkeys, and musicians whose music is intended to drown out the patient’s screams. This farcical scene is observed by an elegant couple – sophisticated townsfolk – who stand in front of the podium. Several other figures show an interest in the merchandise on offer at various market stalls.

Although in the past the village was identified as Valkenburg near Leiden, it is probably the product of Jan Steen’s imagination. He presumably produced this painting after moving to The Hague (c.1649), where he married the daughter of the landscape painter Jan van Goyen. Two figures standing in the middle, to the left of the horse, were previously linked to a drawing that is now attributed to Isack van Ostade (Leiden, Prentenkabinet, Universiteit Leiden, inv. no. PK-T-1895).

Détails

Informations générales
Jan Steen (Leiden 1626 - 1679 Leiden)
Village Fair
painting
664
Détails des matériaux et techniques
oil
panel
47.4 x 66.1 cm
Inscriptions
lower centre: JSteen
JS in ligature

Origine

Hennin sale, Paris, 16 January 1764 (Lugt 1342), no. 64 (100 francs and 50 centimes); A. Visscher-Boelger, Basel; Jos Schall Gallery, Baden-Baden; J.E. Goedhart Gallery, Amsterdam, 1901; Abraham Bredius, The Hague, 1901-1946 (on long-term loan to the Mauritshuis, since 1901); bequest of Abraham Bredius, 1946