Collection
Adriaen Brouwer
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Vechtende kaartspelers bij een herberg - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Smokers - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Operation - Adriaen Brouwer
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A Peasant with a Bird - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Master of Drinking - Adriaen Brouwer
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Drinkers in the Yard - Adriaen Brouwer
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Moonlit Landscape - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Back Operation - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Card Players - Adriaen Brouwer
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Two Peasants - Adriaen Brouwer
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Peasants Playing Cards in a Tavern - Adriaen Brouwer
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Operation on Foot - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Smoker - Adriaen Brouwer
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Smallholders Playing Dice - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Brawl - Adriaen Brouwer
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Interior of a Tavern - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Drinker - Adriaen Brouwer
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Peasants Smoking and Drinking - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Schlachtfest - Adriaen Brouwer
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In The Tavern - Adriaen Brouwer
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Peasant Inn - Adriaen Brouwer
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Portrait of a Man (Adriaen Brouwer) - Adriaen Brouwer
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Village Barbershop - Adriaen Brouwer
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The Bitter Drinker - Adriaen Brouwer
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Artist Biography
Adriaen Brouwer
When Adriaen Brouwer died in Antwerp in January 1638, possibly of plague and almost certainly in debt, his artist friends had to raise a subscription to give him a decent burial in the Carmelite Church. The irony was that Peter Paul Rubens owned seventeen of his paintings and Rembrandt was also a collector. Anthony van Dyck had included him in his Iconography series of portraits of famous men. For a painter of drunken tavern brawls and grimacing peasants having their corns excised, this represented an unusual concentration of elite admiration.
Born around 1605 in Oudenaarde (then in the Spanish Netherlands), Brouwer trained in the Dutch Republic, probably in Haarlem, where he encountered the loose, rapid brushwork associated with Frans Hals. By 1631 he was back in Antwerp. He was imprisoned there in 1633, possibly for debt or suspected espionage; during his imprisonment a baker named Joos van Craesbeeck encountered him and became both his closest pupil and a devoted friend. Brouwer produced roughly 60 paintings across his entire career before dying aged around thirty-two.
His subjects were the lowest rung of Dutch and Flemish society: peasants drinking, smoking, gambling, fighting, and submitting themselves to rural barber-surgeons. The Barber-Surgeon paintings (including the version at the Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt, c. 1636) carry a deliberate iconographic joke: scholars have noted that the composition of a patient having a corn cut from his foot borrows the visual conventions of Christian martyrdom paintings, pushed to the point of caricature. His technique was equally pointed: the warm, spontaneous brushwork contrasted with the grotesque content to suggest sympathy rather than contempt for his subjects.
Art historians have positioned Brouwer at the junction of Flemish and Dutch genre traditions, bridging Pieter Bruegel the Elder's peasant scenes with the looser bravura of Hals. The collector appetite that Rubens and Rembrandt demonstrated was not entirely separate from the art's critical content: the drinker and the tavern denizen functioned in this tradition as an avatar for humanity in its unguarded state, beyond social hierarchy. That reading did not make Brouwer solvent. It did save him from obscurity.
Born around 1605 in Oudenaarde (then in the Spanish Netherlands), Brouwer trained in the Dutch Republic, probably in Haarlem, where he encountered the loose, rapid brushwork associated with Frans Hals. By 1631 he was back in Antwerp. He was imprisoned there in 1633, possibly for debt or suspected espionage; during his imprisonment a baker named Joos van Craesbeeck encountered him and became both his closest pupil and a devoted friend. Brouwer produced roughly 60 paintings across his entire career before dying aged around thirty-two.
His subjects were the lowest rung of Dutch and Flemish society: peasants drinking, smoking, gambling, fighting, and submitting themselves to rural barber-surgeons. The Barber-Surgeon paintings (including the version at the Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt, c. 1636) carry a deliberate iconographic joke: scholars have noted that the composition of a patient having a corn cut from his foot borrows the visual conventions of Christian martyrdom paintings, pushed to the point of caricature. His technique was equally pointed: the warm, spontaneous brushwork contrasted with the grotesque content to suggest sympathy rather than contempt for his subjects.
Art historians have positioned Brouwer at the junction of Flemish and Dutch genre traditions, bridging Pieter Bruegel the Elder's peasant scenes with the looser bravura of Hals. The collector appetite that Rubens and Rembrandt demonstrated was not entirely separate from the art's critical content: the drinker and the tavern denizen functioned in this tradition as an avatar for humanity in its unguarded state, beyond social hierarchy. That reading did not make Brouwer solvent. It did save him from obscurity.
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