Renaissance · Europe · Culture

1625

Hals Paints the Laughing Cavalier

1625

The Haarlem portraitist Frans Hals, working with rapid slashing brushstrokes that looked like mistakes until you stepped back, produced his most famous likeness: a twenty-six-year-old officer with a curled mustache and a smirk rather than a laugh. Dutch Golden Age portraiture had found its swagger, and Hals had demonstrated that paint applied with bravado could capture personality more vividly than any careful glaze.