In the 18th episode of 'Frans Hals Paintings—The Podcast’, I discuss Frans Hals' c. early-1660s portrait of Issac Abrahamsz Massa, which is in the collection of the Schloss Wilhelmshöhe, in Kassel, Germany. Seymour Slive numbered the work number 217, in his 1974 catalogue, and Claus Grimm accepted it as number 145, in his of 1989. The portrait was included in the solo Hals exhibitions of the twentieth century of 1937, 1962, and in Haarlem in 1990. Issac is portrayed with Hals' characteristic swift, confident brushstrokes: a muted and muddled color palette defines the work, with deep blacks and earthy tones, subtly punctuated by the crisp white collar, which serves to frame the subject's face and draw the viewer's eye to his, slightly mischievous expression. The relaxed pose, with one arm draped over the back of a chair, is quintessentially Hals, reflecting his ability to break from formality and imbue his portraits with a candid, conversational quality that distinguishes his work from that of his contemporaries. Often considered an anomaly, though nearly entrancing when spending prolonged period of looking at the painting in person; this portrait from Hals' last years of his career, and life, displays the mature techniques he had by then refined, concerning contours and borders—which imbues the work with a complex layering of paint, creating 'foggy', vector-like expanses on the canvas.
Learn more about Issac Abrahamsz Massa.
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'Frans Hals Paintings—The Podcast' is published by Semicolon-Press.
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