7 Amazing Facts About Judith Leyster

A 17th -century talent lost and found

By Google Arts & Culture

By Rebecca Appel

The Last Drop (The Gay Cavalier) (c. 1639) by Judith Leyster, Dutch (active Haarlem and Amsterdam), 1609 - 1660Philadelphia Museum of Art

Dutch Golden Age painter Judith Leyster (1609–1660) was quickly recognized as a rare talent in her native Haarlem. By just age 24 she had been admitted to the city’s prestigious painters guild. But due to years of misattribution, her name remained largely unknown until the late 19th century.

Read on to learn more about the life and career of this extraordinary artist...

Gezicht op Haarlem uit het noordwesten, met de blekerijen op de voorgrond (ca. 1650 - ca. 1682) by Ruisdael, Jacob Isaacksz vanRijksmuseum

1. A star is born

Judith Leyster was born in Haarlem, in the Netherlands. Fun fact: She was the eighth child of a brewer, and the “Leyster” family name was taken from her father’s brewery, called the “Ley-ster,” or lode star.

The Concert (ca. 1663) by Judith LeysterNational Museum of Women in the Arts

2. Shooting to the top

Leyster joined the Haarlem painters guild in 1633, one of only two female painters to do so in the entire 17th century. Leyster ran her own studio, and had her own apprentices and students.

Studio life was hardly drama free: Leyster once filed a complaint against Frans Hals, the most important artist in Haarlem at the time, for poaching one of her assistants. Hals was made to pay a fine – but kept the assistant.

Boy playing the Flute (c. 1630s) by Judith LeysterNationalmuseum Sweden

3. Leyster’s bawdy band

Leyster primarily produced genre paintings and portraits. Many of her compositions feature one or a few figures happily engaged in domestic activity or merrymaking – playing music or, more often than not, drinking!

Self-Portrait (c. 1630) by Judith LeysterNational Gallery of Art, Washington DC

4. Woman in the mirror

The carefully considered informality of this self-portrait reflects the influence of Frans Hals, who was famous for his free, open brushstrokes. Leyster greatly admired Hals – assistant-stealing notwithstanding – and incorporated elements of his style into her work. But did she ever study with him? No one knows for sure.

A closer look: X-rays have revealed that the man in the picture-within-the-picture (who appears in another of Leyster’s works, Merry Company) was actually painted over a figure of a woman – perhaps a second self-portrait of Leyster herself?

Battle Between Carnival and Lent (about 1633-1634) by Molenaer, Jan MienseIndianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields

5. Becoming Mrs. Molenaer

Leyster’s solo artistic career was sadly short-lived. In 1636, she wed fellow Haarlem artist Jan Miense Molenaer, and painting gave way to children and domestic responsibilities. Leyster stopped painting in her own name, but she likely contributed to the works produced in her husband’s studio.

The Rommel-Pot Player (c.1618–22) by Frans HalsKimbell Art Museum

6. The Name Game

Following her death in 1660, Leyster essentially disappeared from the art historical record. Her works were either left unattributed, or credited to Molenaer or Hals – despite Leyster’s distinctive signature, which featured her initials and a star, a clever play on her last name.

Portret van professor P. Hofstede de Groot (1860 - 1872) by anoniemRijksmuseum

7. Fake it till you make it

It wasn’t until the late 19th century that Leyster’s talent finally began to be acknowledged. In 1893, The Happy Couple, a painting long attributed to Frans Hals, was revealed to be a Leyster: her initials were found underneath a faked signature of Hals. That discovery, by Dutch art historian Cornelis Hofstede de Groot, and an article he published on her, led to the attribution of seven additional works to Leyster.

Despite the success and acclaim she achieved in her lifetime, centuries of misattribution pushed Leyster completely out of the frame. Happily, though, years of scholarly detective work have succeeded in bringing more of her art to light. In 2009, Leyster was the subject of a retrospective at the National Gallery of Art, in Washington, D.C. – finally getting the spotlight she deserves!

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Explore more
Related theme
Where are the Women?
Celebrate women in arts and culture
View theme
Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites