
Woman plucking a duck
Pieter de Hooch·1675
Historical Context
This painting from 1675 by Pieter de Hooch demonstrates the vitality of seventeenth-century Dutch painting . As master of Dutch Golden Age domestic interior and courtyard scenes, Pieter de Hooch approaches the subject with luminous interiors and luminous interiors, producing a work of both technical accomplishment and expressive power. De Hooch's interior scenes belong to the tradition of Dutch domestic painting that found its most celebrated expression in Vermeer's work — a tradition that treated the domestic interior as a theater of moral and social meaning expressed through the quality of light, the disposition of objects, and the activities of the women and children who inhabited these spaces. De Hooch's interiors are distinguished by their spatial complexity: the characteristic view through a doorway into another room (and sometimes another beyond that) creates perspectives of domestic depth that suggest a whole house, a whole life, behind the immediate scene. The meticulous rendering of tiled floors, whitewashed walls, and sunlit windows was simultaneously a documentary record and a meditation on Dutch domestic virtue.
Technical Analysis
Executed with precise perspective and attention to luminous interiors, the work reveals Pieter de Hooch's characteristic approach to composition and surface. The treatment of light and the careful modulation of color create visual richness within a unified pictorial scheme.







