Jan Steen
(born about 1626 Leyden, The Netherlands, died about 1679 Leyden,
The Netherlands), was a Dutch Painter. Remarkably, given the meager
living he made from art, Jan Steen was the humorist among Dutch
painters. He persevered, creating nearly eight hundred pictures,
most with a moral beneath the wit. A prosperous brewer's son, Steen
enrolled in Leyden University in 1646, but by 1648 he was helping
to found the Leyden Guild of Saint Luke. His teachers may
have included Nikolaus Knüpfer. Steen was not one to stay put;
he lived in The Hague; Haarlem; Leyden, where he ran a tavern; and
Delft, where he leased a brewery. He married Jan van Goyen's
daughter.
Steen dated few
paintings and frequently varied his style. His
range included riotous tavern scenes and gentle lessons. His
commonplace interiors with ordinary people look straightforward,
but he usually included a moral, sometimes as an inscription.
Allusions to old proverbs, emblems, literature, and the
theater abound. A lifelong Catholic, he painted more than sixty
religious pictures, usually treating them like incidents in
seventeenth-century Holland and not holding back on the humanity or
humor. Steen's skill in rendering light and texture rank him with
Gerard ter Borch. He frequently portrayed himself in pictures
— not necessarily flatteringly. The Dutch call a lively,
untidy home a “Jan Steen household.”
The image accompanying
this short biography is a self-portrait painted circa 1670. It is an
oil on canvas painting, 73 x 62 centimeters (28.7 x 24.4 inches), and
is hanging at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.