The Week

Exhibition of the week Frans Hals: The Male Portrait

Wallace Collection, London W1 (020-7563 9500, wallacecol­lection.org). Until 30 January 2022

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You’ve got to admire the gumption of the curators at London’s Wallace Collection, said Alastair Sooke in The Daily Telegraph. At a moment when “museums and galleries are obsessed with diversity”, they have opened a show that “couldn’t be more pale, stale or male if it tried”. Frans Hals (c.1582-1666), was a Dutch Golden Age portraitis­t renowned for his likenesses of “rich and powerful men”, and best known for the Wallace’s “beloved” The Laughing Cavalier (1624) – that “primped and perfumed dandy”, with his “buoyant waxed moustache” and “smirking aura”. Yet however unfashiona­ble the artist’s subject matter may now seem, Hals was a true pioneer who “revolution­ised” portraitur­e, depicting his sitters with “swashbuckl­ing brushwork”, and giving them an “immediate, sparky and natural” quality previously unknown in European painting. From his death until the 19th century, however, he was “baselessly written off as a feckless alcoholic” – chiefly on account of the “boisterous” poses struck by his sitters. It was only in the 19th century that he was rediscover­ed by the impression­ists and their successors – van Gogh was a particular fan – who hailed him as “a harbinger of modern art”. As the show proves, they were quite right. Bringing together around a dozen portraits, this “exhilarati­ng” exhibition is a magnificen­t testament to a “dazzlingly bold” artist.

“It’s like taking your place for dinner at a gentlemen’s club,” said Rachel Campbell-Johnston in The Times. Hals spent almost his entire life in the Dutch city of Haarlem, where the prosperous local elites were composed of “burgomaste­rs, minor noblemen and wealthier brewers and merchants”, many of whom sought his services as a portrait artist. What’s astonishin­g is quite how unflatteri­ng so many of these extraordin­ary likenesses are: in Hals’s hands, the cloth merchant Tieleman Roosterman looks “unbearably arrogant”, his “puffy eyes” staring down at us past his “bulbous nose”. His 1660 portrait of an unknown man presents its subject as a ruddyfaced “dissolute”; you can “all but smell the sour wine on his hiccups”. Even the famous

Laughing Cavalier has an air of smugness to him, his “selfconfid­ent come-hither gaze” radiating insincere charm. The subject may not have changed, but Hals certainly developed as an artist. The show begins with

Portrait of a Man, a work from 1610 that clearly “harks back to Holbein”, but it ends with that 1660 portrait, so “loosely and lusciously rendered that it looks forward to Manet”.

We encounter some “terrifical­ly vivacious” characters in this “splendid” exhibition, said Melanie McDonagh in the London Evening Standard. Pieter van den Broecke, for instance, a Dutch East India Company admiral, is a “cheerful, weather-beaten” figure with “unkempt” hair. The curators provide fascinatin­g biographic­al details: he participat­ed in the slave trade but freed two women with whom he had a child each; he also introduced the coffee plant to Europe. There’s a “remarkable range of expression­s and types” on display here, said Waldemar Januszczak in The Sunday Times. Each portrait – the brewer with a beer belly, the merchant leaning over the back of a chair – feels “like a separate event”. It adds up to a “riveting” show.

 ?? ?? The Laughing Cavalier (1624): a “primped and perfumed dandy”
The Laughing Cavalier (1624): a “primped and perfumed dandy”

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