A Woman and her Maid in a Courtyard

Image credit: The National Gallery, London

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We seem to be looking at a scene just outside a kitchen. A maid has brought a steaming cauldron out from the kitchen stove and placed it near the open drain in the courtyard. Apparently obeying her mistress, who stands in front of her, she seems to have taken the fish out of the cooking pot; perhaps she is doing this outside to make it easier to pour away the water.One of the most appealing aspects of Dutch seventeenth-century painting is the insight it gives us into everyday life, and especially the lives of women. Scenes of ordinary mothers and children or maids and their mistresses at ease in their own homes had hardly been depicted in art before. But in Holland from about the 1640s, the theme became a popular one and Pieter de Hooch’s paintings are some of the most evocative examples of the genre.

The National Gallery, London

London

Title

A Woman and her Maid in a Courtyard

Date

about 1660/1

Medium

Oil on canvas

Measurements

H 73.7 x W 62.6 cm

Accession number

NG794

Acquisition method

Bought, 1869

Work type

Painting

The National Gallery, London

Trafalgar Square, London, Greater London WC2N 5DN England

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