
Portrait of a man holding a book
Frans Hals·1642
Historical Context
A man holding a book, dated 1642, makes a gesture suggesting scholarly or professional identity — the book implying learning, law, or religion. Hals's portraits frequently include objects that identify the sitter's profession or interests, providing biographical context within the visual record. Hals's revolutionary loose brushwork, capturing the immediacy of fleeting expression with a boldness that seemed impossibly spontaneous to his contemporaries, was rediscovered by the Realists and Impressionists in the nineteenth century as an anticipation of their own aims.
Technical Analysis
The book adds compositional interest and symbolic meaning, the hand holding it painted with the decisive strokes that characterize Hals's treatment of hands and accessories. The face is rendered with the increasingly broad handling of the early 1640s, the features emerging from a dark ground with powerful directness.







