Gabriel Metsu

The Huntsman

93 detail signatuur en datering
93 achterzijde
93 ingelijst
93 voorzijde
93 voorzijde

Gabriel Metsu
The Huntsman

Non visible

A huntsman in a fine red jacket is sitting at an open window. He is raising his glass and giving us a roguish look. In front of him are the attributes of his work: a hunting horn and a dead pigeon. For Dutch-speaking contemporaries, the puns would have been immediately clear. The words ‘jagen’ (to hunt) and ‘vogelen’ (to catch birds) also referred to courting and making love.

Metsu was born in Leiden, where he learned to paint very finely and precisely, like the Leiden ‘fijnschilder’, or fine painter, Gerrit Dou. The shiny jug on the windowsill shows these skills clearly.

Détails techniques
93 voorzijde

Gabriel Metsu
The Huntsman

Non visible

Vers le haut

Détails

Informations générales
Gabriel Metsu (Leiden 1629 - 1667 Amsterdam)
The Huntsman
painting
93
Détails des matériaux et techniques
oil
panel
28 x 22.8 cm
Inscriptions
lower centre, below the bird: G.Metsu.1661

Origine

Govert van Slingelandt, The Hague, in or before 1752-1767; his widow, Agatha Huydecoper, The Hague, 1767-1768; Van Slingelandt sale, The Hague, 18 May 1768 (Lugt 1683), no. 19; the entire collection sold to Prince William V; Prince William V, The Hague, 1768-1795; confiscated by the French, transferred to the Muséum central des arts/Musée Napoléon (Musée du Louvre), Paris, 1795-1815; Royal Picture Gallery, housed in the Prince William V Gallery, The Hague, 1816; transferred to the Mauritshuis, 1822