Anna van der Aar (born 1576/77, died after 1626)
Frans Hals, 1626
About this artwork
Frans Hals's *Anna van der Aar*1626) is a gem of intimate portraiture from the Dutch Age. This oil on wood panel, measuring just 8¾ × 6½ inches, captures the middle-aged subject—born around 1576–77 and living past 1626—with remarkable immediacy. Likely a personal commission, its diminutive scale suggests it was meant for private devotion or close study, a format Hals occasionally used to showcase his skill in tight compositions. Hals, a Haarlem master renowned for his loose, energetic brushwork and ability to convey personality through expressive faces, brings Anna to life with vibrant realism. The oil medium on wood allowed for rich impasto effects and luminous skin tones, hallmarks of his Baroque-influenced style that broke from the era's more rigid conventions. This work exemplifies how Hals revolutionized portraiture, emphasizing vitality over stiff formality. Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings collection (H. O. Havemeyer Bequest, 1929), it highlights the cultural role of women's portraits in 17th-century Netherlands, blending social status with artistic innovation. A must-see for fans of Hals's joyful humanism!