Skip to main content

Paulus Constantijn La Fargue, 'The Grote Markt at The Hague', 1760

About the work

Overview

La Fargue presents a flourishing market packed with people. He looks on his world fondly and with humour, making ’slice of life' pictures similar to William Hogarth, but without Hogarth’s merciless, satirical eye.

Seen from the Prinsengracht –- one of the principal thoroughfares of The Hague – the building in the centre is the Grote Kerk, the Church of St Jacob. On the left is the Boterhuis, a newly built warehouse for storing wholesale butter, one of the mainstays of the prosperous Dutch economy. In front of it, a market stall sells second-hand clothes.

La Fargue paints the tall trees with the impasto technique, so the surface of each leaf would be rough if you were to touch it. He paints every brick, every windowpane, every crooked drainpipe with care and precision. The fun of the picture, then and now, is in a personal interpretation of each little event, and in returning again and again to find something new to explore.

Key facts

Details

Full title
The Grote Markt at The Hague
Artist dates
1729 - 1782
Date made
1760
Medium and support
oil on wood
Dimensions
57.6 × 75.9 cm
Inscription summary
Signed; Dated
Acquisition credit
Bought, 1903
Inventory number
NG1918
Location
Not on display
Collection
Main Collection

About this record

If you know more about this painting or have spotted an error, please contact us. Please note that exhibition histories are listed from 2009 onwards. Bibliographies may not be complete; more comprehensive information is available in the National Gallery Library.

Images