Two laughing boys with mug of beer

Two laughing boys with mug of beer, c.1626 Oil on canvas, 69 x 56.5 cm
Artist Frans Hals
Year 1626 (1626)
Catalogue Seymour Slive, Catalog 1974: #60
Material Oil on canvas
Dimensions 68 cm × 56.5 cm (27 in × 22.2 in)
Location Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam
Accession Br.L.4
This painting featured on the cover of the 1937 Frans Hals exhibition catalog of the Frans Hals museum

Two laughing boys with mug of beer refers to a painting by Frans Hals showing a Kannekijker (mug-looker). Someone looking into a mug refers to an old Dutch word for a glutton, greedy for more. This visual theme was also used to depict sight as one of the five senses, and various people have argued about whether this portrait was meant as one in a series of the five senses along with Two Boys singing for hearing and a variant version of The Smoker for smell:

Hals has an accomplice peering over his shoulder, and besides the other two paintings already mentioned, this theme of a main subject with a secondary witness was common to many of his paintings of the 1620s:

The theme of looking into a mug was also used by Hals when he painted the portrait of Peeckelhaeringh who turns to the viewer to show his mug. This painting of two laughing boys with mug of beer is in the collection of the Hofje van Mevrouw van Aerden and was stolen on 27 April 2011, but was recovered on 28 October 2011.[1] After recovery it was given on long-term loan to the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen.

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