
The Frans Hals Museum and the Mauritshuis have together purchased two paintings by Frans Hals at an auction in New York. Boy Playing the Violin and Girl Singing were bought at Sotheby’s with the help of the Rembrandt Association, the Mondrian Fund, the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science’s National Acquisition Fund, the VriendenLoterij lottery and Haarlem municipal council. The paintings are a unique acquisition for the Netherlands, because they may depict Hals’ own children, and offer us a glimpse of the Netherlands in the 17th century. They will remain together, and will be shown alternately in Haarlem and The Hague.
The two panels, painted in circa 1628, are an important addition to the Netherlands’ public art collection, and to the collections of the two museums. Frans Hals is known internationally for his portraits and his genre paintings: scenes of ordinary people going about their daily business, as might be seen on the streets today. The Dutch national collection has included very few of Hals’ genre scenes until now. The portraits of two children playing music are particularly interesting as the boy and girl may be the artist’s own son and daughter.