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1 of 253523 objects
The Drummer Signed and dated 1647
Oil on copper | 49.5 x 65.3 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external) | RCIN 406577
David Teniers the Younger (Antwerp 1610-Brussels 1690)
The Drummer Signed and dated 1647
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Military subjects were popular on either side of the frontier during the Eighty Years War (1568-1648). The most common image of the soldier’s life was the guard-room scene, a glamorous version of the tavern scene, where soldiers smoke, drink and play cards. This painting may have been executed for Teniers’s master, the Archduke Leopold William, who was commander-in-chief of the Spanish army in Flanders. It is rare in depicting the camp rather than the guard-room, but tries to convey the same aimless boredom of military life. Almost all military scenes provide an excuse for the artist to depict a still life of as many different weapons as possible; the glint of light off steel is rendered especially effectively here on this painting executed on the reflective medium of copper.
Flemish artists like Jan Brueghel had made a speciality of depicting allegorical figures surrounded by the attributes or results of the thing they personify: the element of Fire, for example, might be surrounded by a huge pile of metal objects which had been created in the heat of a forge. The same convention is employed here and in the Old Woman peeling Turnips (Royal Collection); she could be an allegory of hearth and home balanced by a pile of vegetables; the drummer here could be an allegory of war matched by a pile of armour.
Signed and dated lower left: D. TENIERS.F.1647
Catalogue entry adapted from Bruegel to Rubens: Masters of Flemish Painting, London, 2007Provenance
Acquired by George IV in 1803; recorded in the Anti Room to the Dining Room at Carlton House in 1819 (no 84); in the Picture Gallery at Buckingham Palace in 1841 (no 179)
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Medium and techniques
Oil on copper
Measurements
49.5 x 65.3 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external)
72.6 x 87.9 x 7.4 cm (frame, external)
Category
Object type(s)
Other number(s)
Alternative title(s)
'Le Tambour-battant'