Object Image

The Village Piper

Modern scholarship has revealed that there is no sufficient information to differentiate between the works of the three Le Nain brothers, Louis, Antoine and Mathieu, and prefers instead to consider their work thematically under the surname of Le Nain. This small painting on copper illustrates one of the themes for which the Le Nain brothers were famous: a genre scene without a specific narrative content representing a street musician surrounded by urchins. The subject is surprising if one considers French painting of the seventeenth century primarily as the reflection of the grandiose taste of the royal court. Such intimate works were nevertheless executed in response to a growing demand from an appreciative middle-class clientele.

Credit: City of Detroit Purchase

1642
Oil on copper
8.9 x 12.0in
30.280
Image and text courtesy of Detroit Institute of Arts Gallery, 2022

Where you'll find this

Detroit Institute of Arts
Detroit Institute of Arts
Permanent collection