Pieter de Hooch’s The Courtyard Of A House In Delft (1658)

Pieter de Hooch is not as well-known these days as fel­low Dutch mas­ters Rem­brandt or Ver­meer (both of whom have appeared in these pages) but he was nonethe­less a big hit­ter in the Dutch Gold­en Age and one of my favourite artists. The Dutch Gold­en Age, so called, was the peri­od rough­ly span­ning the 17th cen­tu­ry in which the new­ly inde­pen­dent Dutch repub­lic flour­ished to become Europe’s most pros­per­ous nation and a lead­ing light in Euro­pean trade, sci­ence, and art.

The upheavals of the Eighty Years’ War (1568–1648), in which the Dutch secured their inde­pen­dence, entailed a break from the old Monar­chist and Catholic tra­di­tions under the Hab­s­burgs, and a shake-up in the arts as well as in oth­er areas of life. Out went reli­gious paint­ing and in came a whole new vari­ety of sec­u­lar sub­jects from still lifes, land­scapes and seascapes, to kamergezicht­en, or “room-views”, show­ing glimpses of every­day domes­tic life, the lat­ter being spe­cial­i­ties of Ver­meer and this week’s sub­ject, Pieter de Hooch.

Pieter de Hooch was born in Rot­ter­dam to a brick­lay­er and a mid­wife, and was brought up in a mod­est work­ing-class home. He went on to study art in Haar­lem under the land­scape painter Nico­laes Berchem and became known for his spe­cial affin­i­ty for fig­ures in inte­ri­ors. Begin­ning in 1650, he worked as a painter and ser­vant for a linen-mer­chant and art col­lec­tor in Rot­ter­dam, and his work took him to The Hague, Lei­den, and Delft, pro­vid­ing him with ample inspi­ra­tion to pur­sue his spe­cial­i­ty. His paint­ings cap­ture delight­ful domes­tic scenes such as this one from 1658, The Court­yard of a House in Delft, which you can see in London’s Nation­al Gallery.

The paint­ing depicts a qui­et court­yard scene in which a young maid holds the hand of a small girl. An arch­way leads from the court­yard into a pas­sage­way and through to the oth­er side of the house. Through the arch­way, a woman stands in the pas­sage­way, look­ing out to the street. The tex­tures and details of the house, such as the tile pat­tern of the court­yard, the brick­work of the arch­way and the stone tablet above it, are ren­dered in detail. Sim­ple but exquis­ite.

Pieter de Hooch, The Court­yard of a House in Delft

William Wycherley’s The Country Wife (1675)

There has always been bawdy humour. The Miller’s Tale, in Geof­frey Chaucer’s late 14th cen­tu­ry mas­ter­piece, The Can­ter­bury Tales, is replete with sex­u­al innu­en­do and crude behav­iour. More recent­ly, we can think about the clas­sic saucy sea­side post­cards of the ear­ly to mid-20th cen­tu­ry fea­tur­ing heav­ing bosoms, hen­pecked hus­bands and dou­ble enten­dres aplen­ty. Think too of the Car­ry On films of the 60s and 70s and the Con­fes­sions of a Win­dow Clean­er fran­chise (fun­ni­ly enough, Robin Asquith, who played the lead role in the Con­fes­sions films, also appeared in a 1972 “erot­ic com­e­dy” ver­sion of The Can­ter­bury Tales, con­tain­ing abun­dant nudi­ty, sex and slap­stick; he evi­dent­ly knew his oeu­vre).

Anoth­er age in his­to­ry that was known for its explo­sion of bawdy humour was the Restora­tion peri­od. The Restora­tion, of course, was the 1660 rein­state­ment of the Stu­art monar­chy, after ten years of Cromwell’s Com­mon­wealth of Eng­land which was char­ac­terised by a Puri­tan cul­ture that amongst oth­er things banned Christ­mas and the the­atre. Buz­zkill, much. The Restora­tion trig­gered an out­pour­ing of cre­ativ­i­ty in the arts and a Renais­sance in Eng­lish dra­ma through­out the late 17th and ear­ly 18th cen­turies. Enter Restora­tion Com­e­dy, and talk about a reac­tion to Puri­tanism: it went quite spec­tac­u­lar­ly the oth­er way, with the new King Charles II active­ly encour­ag­ing sex­u­al­ly explic­it lan­guage in plays.

The the­atres were packed and there was no short­age of play­wrights to keep them that way for a few years (the peak of Restora­tion com­e­dy per se was real­ly only the 1670s and again in the 1690s): promi­nent fig­ures includ­ed John Dry­den, George Etherege, William Dav­enant, Thomas Kil­li­grew, and William Wycher­ley. Wycherley’s com­e­dy The Coun­try Wife (1675) is a case in point. Con­tro­ver­sial for its sex­u­al explic­it­ness even in its own time, the title con­tains a lewd pun with regard to the first syl­la­ble of “coun­try”. Even in our own times, this word rarely makes in on-screen.

The play turns on two indel­i­cate plot devices: a seducer’s ploy of fak­ing impo­tence to safe­ly have clan­des­tine affairs with mar­ried women, and the arrival in Lon­don of an inex­pe­ri­enced young “coun­try wife”, with her dis­cov­ery of the joys of town life, ooh-err mis­sus. The scan­dalous decep­tion and the frank lan­guage have for much of the play’s his­to­ry kept it off the stage and out of print. It was only in 1924 that the play was staged once more; inter­est­ing­ly, itself a year and peri­od that fol­lowed a peri­od of depri­va­tion, name­ly the Great War, which under­stand­ably led to a sense of dev­il-may-care enjoy­ment of free­doms. Although clear­ly a peri­od piece, The Coun­try Wife has been acclaimed for its lin­guis­tic ener­gy and sharp social satire.

The Coun­try Wife fron­tispiece
William Wycher­ley