The Hurdy-Gurdy Player with a Dog

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Yearc.1622
Dimensions1,86 cm × 1,20 cm (73 in × 47 in)
The Hurdy-Gurdy Player with a Dog
ArtistGeorges de La Tour
Yearc.1622
Dimensions1,86 cm × 1,20 cm (73 in × 47 in)
LocationMusée du Mont-de-Piété de Bergues

The Hurdy-Gurdy Player with a Dog is an oil-on-canvas painting executed c. 1622 by the French artist Georges de La Tour, now in the Musée du Mont-de-Piété de Bergues. It belongs to his early period and forms part of a set of works on the same subject, which also includes The Hurdy-Gurdy Player. He is also featured in The Musicians' Brawl.

This painting belongs to the first period of the artist, the diurnal period, in which – against the current of the painting of the time marked by mannerism – La Tour depicted peasants and beggars in all the crudeness of their truth.[1]

It is one of a series of paintings of old beggars.[1] According to a general consensus, The Hurdy-Gurdy Player with a Dog is the oldest painting by La Tour on this subject, datable to around the 1620s, and in any case, predating The Hurdy-Gurdy Player of the Musée d'Arts de Nantes, held to be the most accomplished.

Description

The canvas, monumental in size (186 cm × 120 cm; 73 in × 47 in), is the largest currently attributed to the painter.[2]

It represents, full length and to scale, a blind beggar singing and accompanying himself on the hurdy-gurdy. A small dog who lies by his side on a leash probably serves as his guide.[3] The shallow depth is suggested by pebbles and cobblestone in the foreground, and by the intersection of two side walls blocking the background, the left one in shadow, the right one illuminated by a light whose source is located in front of the frame, on the left. The shadow of the old man stands out clearly on the ground and extends onto the wall, at the right edge of the frame.

The old man has a dramatic and pitiful side at the same time, which is reinforced by the bareness of the decor, the harshness of the lighting,[2] the voice frozen in the open mouth, and the man's unstable stance emphasized by his advanced left foot.[3] The shining eyes that the little dog directs at the spectator, in contrast to the closed eyes of the blind man, add to the melancholy of the scene.[2]

Provenance

References

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