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Europe 1300 - 1800
Course: Europe 1300 - 1800 > Unit 9
Lesson 4: Dutch Republic- Model of the Dutch East India Company ship "Valkenisse"
- The Dutch art market in the 17th century
- Why make a self portrait?
- A Dutch doll house
- Van Mander, Het Schilder-Boeck
- Frederiks Andries, Covered coconut cup
- Osias Beert, Still Life with Various Vessels on a Table
- Anthony van Dyck, Self-Portrait as Icarus with Daedalus
- Saenredam, Interior of Saint Bavo, Haarlem
- Hals, Singing Boy with Flute
- Hals, Malle Babbe
- Frans Hals, The Women Regents
- Willem Claesz. Heda, Still Life with Glasses and Tobacco
- Rembrandt, The Artist in His Studio
- Rembrandt, The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp
- Rembrandt, The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp
- Rembrandt, The Night Watch
- Rembrandt, The Night Watch
- Rembrandt, Self-Portrait with Saskia
- Rembrandt, Girl at a Window
- Rembrandt, Aristotle with a Bust of Homer
- Rembrandt, Aristotle with a Bust of Homer
- Rembrandt, Christ Crucified between the Two Thieves: The Three Crosses.
- Rembrandt, Bathsheba at her Bath
- Rembrandt, Abraham Francen
- Rembrandt, Self-Portrait
- Rembrandt, Self-Portrait with Two Circles
- Rembrandt, The Jewish Bride
- Rembrandt, Christ Preaching (Hundred Guilder Print)
- Is it a genuine Rembrandt?
- Judith Leyster, The Proposition
- Judith Leyster, Self-Portrait
- Early Dutch Torah Finials
- Michaelina Wautier, The Five Senses
- Willem Kalf, Still Life with a Silver Ewer
- Gerrit Dou, A Woman Playing a Clavichord
- Vermeer, The Glass of Wine
- Vermeer, Young Woman with a Water Pitcher
- Johannes Vermeer, Woman Holding a Balance
- Vermeer, Woman Holding a Balance
- Johannes Vermeer, Girl with a Pearl Earring
- Johannes Vermeer, The Art of Painting
- Jan Steen, Feast of St. Nicholas
- Ruisdael, View of Haarlem with Bleaching Grounds
- Jacob van Ruisdael, The Jewish Cemetery
- Andries Beeckman, The Castle of Batavia and Dutch colonialism
- Frans Post, Landscape with Ruins in Olinda
- Rachel Ruysch, Fruit and Insects
- Rachel Ruysch, Flower Still-Life
- Van Huysum, Vase with Flowers
- Conserving van Walscapelle's Flowers in a Glass Vase
- The Great Atlas, Dutch edition
- The Town Hall of Amsterdam
- Huis ten Bosch (House in the Woods)
- 17th century Delftware
- Baroque art in Holland
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Hals, Malle Babbe
Frans Hals, Malle Babbe, c. 1633, oil on canvas, 78.50 x 66.20 cm (Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin). Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
Want to join the conversation?
- Could the owl be intended as a joke, mocking Malle ("Silly") Babbe? After all, owls are usually (in Western Europe) associated with wisdom rather than insanity (example: Pallas Athena).(13 votes)
- I like that reading! Owls have numerous meanings. Wisdom in relation to Athena as you correctly point out but also as terrifying nocturnal hunters that represent evil.(8 votes)
- Atcould we view this brushwork as the beginning of, or an influence on the impressionism to come??? 2:00(4 votes)
- The Dutch wikipedia page for this painting says: "De manier van schilderen is ongebruikelijk voor de 17e eeuw en lijkt meer op die van de Impressionisten uit de 19e eeuw" (The way of painting is unusual for the 17th century, en resembles that of the 19th century impressionists).(9 votes)
- Who would have commissioned for something like this to be painted????(3 votes)
- I feel the artist really captured how a real person in real time,can have so many people trrying to figure out whats really going on here. I can write many stories on this one.(2 votes)
- So... trying to understand facial expressions and body language more. What about this woman makes people uncomfortable? Is it that her eyes and forehead muscles arent smiling along with her mouth? Or maybe that the corners of her lips are curling upwards too much? To me, she just seems like she is drunkenly laughing at something....(2 votes)
- I feel a sense of humiliation, and fear in her face. Like grin and bare it. Almost like power control, domestic violence ? heard of in every generation. Could be a face of Ill get you later!! Ha HA HA! Just seems she is not her own person.(2 votes)
- This woman appears as if she is a servant, and has been for sometime. Or wife of a drinking man, whom she is trying to keep in good spirits for goodness sake. Slightly forced smile, some sad. 5:26(1 vote)
- At, he meantions the "dangers of drink" while the cup like object to her left is shown. Was this woman perhaps put in the asylum for drink, or was that just an example? 1:35(1 vote)
- she???! really?! 0:15(0 votes)
- Yes her face tells me shes heard the comments to many times like that.I know we have all have been made fun of at one time or another. Sometimes we do it to ourselves. Can drive one to insanity.(3 votes)
- How many paintings of Malle Babbe are known ?
It seems that the artist has painted several variations .(1 vote) - Is the lady in the picture with her pet owl on her shoulder was she a real person
or is it just a fiction?(1 vote)- a real person, an inmate of the same asylum where the painter's own son was confined.(1 vote)
- when is this video create in(1 vote)
Video transcript
(relaxed piano music) - [Beth] Frans Hals' Malle Babbe is not an easy image to look at. - [Steven] Art historians have
actually found documentation that this was a historical figure, somebody who actually lived
in Harlem at this time. She was, in fact, committed to the city of Harlem's insane asylum. The owl comes from a Dutch expression "to be as drunk as an
owl," but also a reference to the idea of night, and
perhaps also a reference to Malle Babbe's nickname, which
referred to her as a witch, and of course the owl is
a signifier of witchcraft. It's interesting to
note just biographically that the artist's, Frans Hals, son was also committed there with her. So it seems that the
artist was perhaps inspired to explore madness in
this very direct way. - [Beth] This is a very
complicated picture in terms of the response
that it evokes in us. It's that feeling of seeing
someone who isn't connected to reality anymore, and wondering what they're interaction
is going to be with us. Is she going to ask something of me? Is she going to speak to me? I want to back away. - [Steven] So it's the unpredictability, it's the risk that she'll
too easily step outside of the conventions of interaction. - [Beth] And that I
won't know how to respond to her, and that's very uncomfortable. - [Steven] So here we have an artist who is painting this image of her. Maybe she sat for him, maybe she didn't, but it's an investigation of her insanity, it's an investigation
of the dangers of drink, it's his own exploration of the world that his son inhabits, perhaps. But it doesn't seem
particularly sympathetic. - [Beth] I think he
painted her very honestly. I think that's part of the
rapidity of the brush work, is that it is a caught moment. - [Steven] She appears out of control, and part of the reason for that is Hals' handling of brushwork. You see this incredibly rapid, incredibly gestural brushwork. It seems almost as if it is his signature across the surface. Look, for instance, at the
white at the bottom right that seems to be where she ties her apron, or look at the black line
that defines the shadow at the end of the ruffle of her collar. It is just electric. We see his hand moving
with lightening speed across that surface, and it seems to mimic the unease that this
woman herself creates. - [Beth] I think the brushwork
is a perfect metaphor for her state of mind, in
a way that's really tragic. We have this moment of laughter, yet what we're looking at is the tragedy of mental illness, and I think that's part of what makes us uncomfortable as viewers. - [Steven] Especially since
laughter should take place in a social environment, and
we don't know where she is. But generally we would hope that she would be in a tavern with others. Perhaps a joke had been
told and she was responding. But because that other information is not available to us, she's isolated with her own laughter, making
this even more uncomfortable. You know the 17th century in Holland was this moment when
painting becomes modern, in that it begins to fulfill its potential to represent humanity
in all of its facets. No longer is painting
relegated to the religious, no longer is painting relegated
to the royal portrait, but there is this attention now to some of the complications that make us human. (jazz piano music)