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Manhood, Marriage, and Mischief

Rembrandt's 'Night Watch' and Other Dutch Group Portraits
  • Harry Berger
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2006
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About this book

A study of the theory and practice of seventeenth-century Dutch group portraits, Manhood, Marriage, and Mischief offers an account of the genre’s comic and ironic features, which it treats as comments on the social context of portrait sitters who are husbands and householders as well as members of civic and proto-military organizations. The introduction picks out anomalous touches with which Rembrandt problematizes standard group-portrait motifs in The Night Watch: a shooter who fires his musket into the company; two girls who appear to be moving through the company in the wrong direction; guardsmen who appear to be paying little or no attention to their leader’s enthusiastic gesture of command. Were the patrons and sitters aware of or even complicit in staging the anomalies? If not, did the painter get away with a subversive parody of militia portrait conventions at the sitters’ expense? Parts One and Two respond to these questions at several levels: first, by analyzing the aesthetic structure of group portraiture as a genre; second, by reviewing the conflicting accounts modern scholars give of the civic guard company as an institution; third, by marking the effect on civic guardsmen of a mercantile economy that relied heavily on wives and mothers to keep the homefires burning. Two phenomena persistently recur in the portraits under discussion: competitive posing and performance anxiety. Part Three studies these phenomena in portraits of married couples and families. Finally, Part Four examines them in The Night Watch in the light of the first three parts. The result is an interpretation that reads Rembrandt’s painting both as a deliberate parody by the sitters and as the artist’s covert parody of the sitters.


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Part One. Group portraits and the fictions of the pose

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Part Two. Militias and marriage

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Part Three. Picturing family values

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Part Four ‘The night watch’ as homosocial pastoral

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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
March 24, 2022
eBook ISBN:
9780823292127
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
192
Other:
42 color and 58 black and white illustrations
Downloaded on 22.10.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780823292127/html
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