Boors Drinking
About this artwork
Characteristic of Teniers’s early genre paintings, this work depicts ‘boors’ revelling in a tavern. A group of peasants gather around a small table and are engaged in drinking and smoking pipes. Such scenes of crude behaviour were popular among those wealthy enough to buy paintings. They had a moralising implication, and were enjoyed by wealthy patrons who compared their own behaviour to that of the uncouth peasants, thereby gauging their own superior principles and moral wellbeing. The figures often displayed readable unscrupulous gestures, for example, the man standing smoking has his left hand (traditionally the sinister hand) concealed in his coat, and his hat pulled down over his eyes to denote his untrustworthiness.
Updated before 2020
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artist:David Teniers, the YoungerFlemish (1610 - 1690)
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title:Boors Drinking
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date created:1635 - 1640
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materials:Oil on panel
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measurements:37.50 x 27.00 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased 1891
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accession number:NG 823
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gallery:
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subject:
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artwork photographed by:Antonia Reeve
David Teniers, the Younger
David Teniers, the Younger
Teniers was one of the most important seventeenth-century Flemish painters of low-life scenes. He first studied painting under his father in Antwerp. Although he painted some small religious pieces in the 1630s, it was his genre scenes that were most popular and for which he is best remembered. By...