
The Musician
Historical Context
Bartholomeus van der Helst's The Musician from 1662, at the Metropolitan Museum, belongs to the later career of the painter who rivaled Rembrandt as Amsterdam's leading portraitist in the mid-seventeenth century. Van der Helst's smooth, flattering technique and elegant compositions made him more commercially successful than Rembrandt among the Amsterdam patriciate. His genre paintings, though less numerous than his portraits, demonstrate the same polished technique and attention to fashionable costume.
Technical Analysis
Van der Helst's polished technique renders the musician's costume and instrument with characteristic smoothness and precision. The warm palette and the careful rendering of silk, lace, and musical instruments demonstrate his mastery of the elegant, highly finished style that made him popular with wealthy Amsterdam patrons.
See It In Person
More by Bartholomeus van der Helst

Portrait of a Man
Bartholomeus van der Helst·1647

Banquet at the Crossbowmen’s Guild in Celebration of the Treaty of Münster
Bartholomeus van der Helst·1648

Egbert Meeuwsz Cortenaer (1605-65). Vice admiral, admiralty of the Maas, Rotterdam
Bartholomeus van der Helst·1660

Portrait of Gerard Andriesz Bicker, son of Andries Bicker and lord of Muiden
Bartholomeus van der Helst·1642



