
In the 20th episode of 'Frans Hals Paintings—The Podcast’, I discuss Frans Hals' c. 1639 work titled Pieter Jacobsz Olycan, which is in the collection of the Ringling Museum of Art. Seymour Slive numbered the work number 128 in his 1974 catalogue, and Claus Grimm accepted it as number A3.32, in his of 2023. It was included in the solo Hals exhibitions of the twentieth century of 1962, and in 2010 at the Dallas Museum of Art as part of the exhibition 'Frans Hals: Detecting a Decade'—where it was hung alongside another Hals portrait of Pieter, from about a decade earlier; hence the name. This portrait found its way into the collection of John Ringling and his wife Mable around 1927 and was bequested by them to the museum collection they created in 1936. In this portrait, Pieter, a brewer and former mayor of Haarlem, is presented in a half-length, three-quarter view against a restrained grey ground. He wears a broad white millstone ruff and a voluminous black cloak, whose dark mass anchors the composition. His body turns slightly to the left while his gaze meets the viewer with steady concentration. His gaze is proud, understated, sumptuous, and piercing—all at once.
You can find John on X @johnbezold and at his website johnbezold.com.
'Frans Hals Paintings—The Podcast' is published by Semicolon-Press.
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