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The Portraitist Steven Nadler

The Portraitist von Steven Nadler

The Portraitist Steven Nadler


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The Portraitist Zusammenfassung

The Portraitist: Frans Hals and His World Steven Nadler

A biography of the great portraitist Frans Hals that takes the reader into the turbulent world of the Dutch Golden Age. Frans Hals was one of the greatest portrait painters in history, and his style transformed ideas and expectations about what portraiture can do and what a painting should look like. Hals was a member of the great trifecta of Dutch Baroque painters alongside Rembrandt and Vermeer, and he was the portraitist of choice for entrepreneurs, merchants, professionals, theologians, intellectuals, militiamen, and even his fellow artists in the Dutch Golden Age. His works, with their visible brush strokes and bold execution, lacked the fine detail and smooth finish common among his peers, and some dismissed his works as sloppy and unfinished. But for others, they were fresh and exciting, filled with a sense of the sitter's animated presence captured with energy and immediacy. Steven Nadler gives us the first full-length biography of Hals in many years and offers a view into seventeenth-century Haarlem and this culturally rich era of the Dutch Republic. He tells the story not only of Hals's life, but also of the artistic, social, political, and religious worlds in which he lived and worked.

The Portraitist Bewertungen

Little is known about the Dutch painter Frans Hals: no letters or diaries survive, and the only contemporary documents are unrevealing. But Nadler manages to construct a satisfying quasi-biography by using the milieu of seventeenth-century Haarlem. . . . Though Hals has long been overshadowed by his contemporary Rembrandt, Nadler demonstrates why his peers held him to be 'the modern painter par excellence.' * New Yorker *
Hals may have become famous for his lifelike portraits, but the only way to depict his own life, Nadler suggests in The Portraitist, is to paint a picture of the social world in which he was embedded. As Nadler acknowledges, this is a book whose subject 'all too often . . . disappear[s] from view.' * New York Review of Books *
Named one of the best books of 2022. * New Yorker *
Splendid. -- Ian Buruma * Times Literary Supplement *
Nadler laments the absence of biographical material about Hals, but does a wonderful job of bringing the social context of his art to life in intricate and lively detail. In so doing, he brings this incomparable artist to life as well. * Literary Review *
In The Portraitist, [Nadler] closes in on his subject, as it were. By sketching the artistic, social, political and religious milieus and the elite subjects who came to Hals for portraits and civic guard pieces, Nadler sketches a sharp picture of the politically turbulent first half of the seventeenth century and Hals' position therein. This results in a quasi-biography which brings Hals to life in a refined way. * NRC Handelsblad *
[The Portraitist] is stylistically much like a portrait by the master: broadly sweeping strokes situate the geopolitical context and are embellished by microhistorical details relating to the art market and to Hals's family and his patrons. The paintings serve as focal points along the way. Though much about Hals's life remains unknown, Nadler's portrait of the age in which he worked is clearly and astutely evoked. . . . Recommended. * Choice *
Nadler's biography of Frans Hals discusses the life and legacy of the Dutch 17th-century painter against the backdrop of his thriving adopted city of Haarlem, delving into the artistic, social, political, and religious worlds of the time. * The Art Newspaper *
Nadler is particularly adept at illuminating the details of the lives of Hals's sitters and how they connect to the ebbs and flows of religious power struggles, inside and outside the Dutch Republic. The resulting image is one of a flexible artist willing to work for individuals of different faiths. At the same time, Nadler casts Hals as an artist who had to navigate a complex, and frequently shifting, religious environment in a never-ending search for commissions and sales. Nadler's illumination of Hals's network is particularly useful in the various passages related to the painter's family. Nadler expertly gathers information about Hals's grandparents, parents, and their relations in Antwerp before the young Hals relocated to Haarlem by 1591. . . . Nadler's book is an informative volume crafted in engaging prose. * Historians of Netherlandish Art Reviews *
Framed by the religious upheavals of the era, situated solidly in the art world of the Dutch Republic, and defining Hals' accomplishments, Nadler's accessible and convincing portrait presents a politically pliant and religiously ambiguous man with loose narrative brushstrokes similar to those used by the genius himself. * Booklist *
Nadler has made 17th-century Holland his own special province. This polymath historian of philosophy has already built onto his expertise about Spinoza and Descartes with truly interdisciplinary studies, including Rembrandt's Jews and Menasseh Ben Israel. Now he makes his own portrait of Rembrandt's contemporary, Frans Hals, and his Haarlem society. Nadler's deep research provides the first thorough biography of Hals, the painter who for half a century boldly fashioned lively likenesses of his fellow citizens onto his canvases. -- Larry Silver, author of Rembrandt's Holland
This welcome new book on Frans Hals situates the artist, his patrons, and his city in a broader perspective than any previous study. We learn about circumstances in his life and milieu that were surely of influence on Hals's paintings. Much to our benefit, Nadler delves into matters that we tend to take for granted. -- Gary Schwartz, author of Rembrandt's Universe
Nadler has masterfully brought Frans Hals to life much as this remarkable seventeenth-century Haarlem artist animated sitters in his portrait paintings. Nadler's engaging narrative draws the reader close to the artist and captures the essence of his distinctive manner of painting. He introduces us to Hals's family, enumerates Hals's financial woes, and assesses the personalities of his sitters, among them merchants, ministers, officers in militia companies, and directors of charitable institutions. Seamlessly fusing these narratives, Nadler evokes the ambiance of Haarlem's rich and varied culture, but he also explores how broader political and religious developments in the Dutch Republic impacted Hals throughout his career. -- Arthur K. Wheelock Jr., author of Clouds, Ice, and Bounty: The Lee and Juliet Fund Collection of Seventeenth-Century Dutch and Flemish Paintings

Über Steven Nadler

Steven Nadler is Vilas Research Professor, the William H. Hay II Professor of Philosophy, and affiliate professor of art history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His books include Think Least of Death: Spinoza on How to Live and How to Die; Menasseh ben Israel: Rabbi of Amsterdam; A Book Forged in Hell: Spinoza's Scandalous Treatise and the Birth of the Secular Age; Spinoza: A Life, Second Edition, which won the Koret Jewish Book Award; and Rembrandt's Jews, which was named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. He is also the author, with his son Ben Nadler, of the graphic book Heretics! The Wondrous (and Dangerous) Beginnings of Modern Philosophy. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

List of Illustrations Introduction 1. Exile 2. Haarlem 3. Master Painter 4. Citizen Hals 5. In a Rough Manner 6. Very Boldly Done after Life 7. Debts and Disputes 8. Pandemics 9. A Pleasing, Good and Sincere Peace 10. Denouement Acknowledgments Notes References Index

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR012618793
9780226698366
022669836X
The Portraitist: Frans Hals and His World Steven Nadler
Gebraucht - Sehr Gut
Gebundene Ausgabe
The University of Chicago Press
2022-10-06
368
N/A
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