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** Grab my Famous Artists eBook! https://www.thehistoryofart.org/ebook... ** Frans Hals is one of the most famous European painters of all time and specialised in the genre of portraiture. He was born in what is now known as Belgium, but starred in the Dutch Golden Age. The artist was a dominant force across the 17th century, contributing several classic paintings such as The Gypsy Girl, Laughing Cavalier and Laughing Boy. His style was remembered for how his loose brushwork was still evident on the canvas, even after each artwork had been completed. He would inspire a number of Dutch and Belgian artists who followed on soon afterwards and also a number of family members also became respected artists themselves. Hals started to receive some notable commissions as his reputation soared and he particularly liked producing portraits of wealthy individuals which would raise the profile of his career. Most of his work in this genre would be single figure portraits in a traditional style, but there were also a number of complex, multi-figure pieces which took much more time but also brought another avenue of interest to his oeuvre. Whilst his own work has fluctuated in popularity in the centuries that have followed since, as a member of the Dutch Golden Age, his career will always be afforded considerable exposure. This region of Northern Europe, which at the time was known as the Spanish Netherlands, was well connected by sea all around the world and so a number of wealthy patrons were starting to appear. They sought the finest artists to produce portraits of themselves and their colleagues, bringing a level of early celebrity to those artists who were courted the most. Hals fell into that bracket and left behind a huge output of portraits by the end of his career. This was aided by the fact that he lived until his early eighties which was highly unusual in the 17th century, even for those living a relatively comfortable life. His impact is today served by a specialist museum set up in his name which contains a number of his major works as well as a selection of art from a number of related artists from around that period. His remaining pieces are dispersed widely across a number of European and American public and private art galleries. An unfortunate downside of living so long is that over time his artistic style would fall out of fashion, leaving him unable to profit from his work. Eventually he would become destitute and relied on the state for a modest income. Some of his paintings were even taken by creditors as his debts soared out of control. Thankfully, his career is seen in a far more balanced manner today, and the highlights of his life are celebrated to the full. Frans Hals became a key component within the visual arts in the overall Dutch Golden Age and his portraits remains highly popular today. Exhibitions of his work remain fairly frequent within Northern Europe, as well as the US and there is also a considerable number of publications about his life and work dating back several centuries. Those studying the broader group during that period will always come across Frans Hals at one point or another, as well as some of those who he inspired in later generations.