Banquete dos Oficiais da Companhia de São Jorge em 1616, Haarlem, Holanda (The Banquet of the Officers of the St George Militia Company in 1616) - Frans Hals
Haarlem - Holanda
Frans Hals Museum, Haarlem, Holanda
OST - 175x324 - 1616
The Banquet of the Officers of the St George Militia Company in
1616 refers to the first of several large schutterstukken painted
by Frans Hals for
the St. George (or St. Joris) civic guard of Haarlem,
and today is considered one of the main attractions of the Frans Hals
Museum there.
Hals was in his thirties when he painted this piece, and was
far from established as a portrait painter. To be safe, he based most of his
design on the painting of his predecessor, Cornelis Cornelisz van Haarlem,
who painted the same militia company in 1599.
Given a nearly impossible task, namely to complete his
assignment but to add theatrical elements at the same time, Hals must have
spent lots of time judging the politics of the group. He knew these men well as
he served in the St. Joris militia himself from 1612-1615. In his painting, he
indicates the political position of each man in the group as well as managing
to give each a characteristic portrait. In Cornelis van Haarlem's piece the
figures seem crammed into a tight space, and each face seems to have a similar
expression. In Hals' group, an illusion of space and relaxed conversation is
given.
Officers were selected by the council of Haarlem to serve for
three years, and this group had just finished their tenure and celebrated their
end of service with a portrait. The man with the orange sash heads the table
and the second in command is on his right. The three ensigns stand and the
servant is carrying a plate.
The men featured are from left to right Provost Johan van
Napels, Colonel Hendrick van Berckenrode (wearing the
orange sash), Captain Jacob
Laurensz, Ensign Jacob Cornelisz Schout (holding the
flag), Captain Vechter Jansz van Teffelen,
Lieutenant Cornelis Jacobsz Schout, Lieutenant Hugo
Mattheusz Steyn, a servant (standing in the back), Ensign Gerrit Cornelisz Vlasman, and Ensign Boudewijn van Offenberg. In the foreground
seated in front of the table are Captain Nicolaes Woutersz van der Meer,
and Lieutenant Pieter Adriaensz Verbeek.
Besides portraying the men and the group dynamics, this
painting shows off the Haarlem damast tablecloth, brocade pillows on the chairs
and the halberds hanging
on the wall. It also displays Hals' talents as a painter: Portraiture, Still
life, and Landscape.
The painting may have been painted on location, as Frans Hals
lived in the Peuzelaarsteeg very close to the St.
George militia headquarters (St. Jorisdoelen) who commissioned the painting,
and managing a canvas of this size would have been a problem in Hals' studio.
As an official art restorer employed by the city council, Hals had probably also
already worked on paintings there. The premises had previously been the
location of the women's convent call the St. Michielsklooster and
after the old hall was refurbished in 1577 to house the St. Joris militia, a
new hall in renaissance style was built at the north end in 1592. The
paintings by Hals and Cornelis van Haarlem hung in the renaissance building at
the corner of the Grote Houtstraat. Today a restaurant, the
windows overlook the garden of the Proveniershuis,
but in the 17th century this was an area used for target practise.
Hals' painting was a huge success, as he won several additional
portrait commissions from the subjects and their relatives, as well as winning
the commission to paint a group portrait of this militia again in 1627 and in
1639. In later years the painting was seen by visitors to Haarlem, as it
remained hanging in its original building after it became an inn. The inn is
featured on Romeyn de Hooghe's map of Haarlem in 1688,
showing the gate with a statue of St. George slaying the dragon as silent
witness to the building's earlier purpose.
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