aNNa schramm's photos with the keyword: v.Honthorst
Die Kupplerin
21 Sep 2019 |
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Die Kupplerin - Gerrit van Honthorst (Anfang 17.Jh)
www.dw.com/de/extrem-unkonventionell-wie-caravaggio-die-maler-seiner-zeit-beeinflusste/g-48374761
Gerrit van Honthorst belongs to the Caravegisten, as well as Dirck van Baburen, Hendrik ter Brugghen ... Caraveggio was the great master and role model.
This picture of the matchmaker by van Honthorst belongs to it.
There is a nice story about it:
On the picture above left in the shade you can see the matchmaker, whom the young prostitute offers to the young man. The young man in the shade in front of him a candle in a candle holder. The candle holder had a bar (dt. Riegel) with which one could adjust how long the candle should burn. This is just negotiated with the young prostitute, because as long as the candle burns then the shepherd hours last... :-))) You can see his finger ist on the
The prostitutes of that time had a dress code, colours like red, green and yellow were rules, and they also had to judge according to them.
The dress codes differed by the time of the Middle Ages and from city to city. For example, prostitutes in Vienna had to wear a yellow cloth on their armpits, in Augsburg a veil with a two-finger thick green line in the middle, in Frankfurt am Main a yellow trimming (hem) and in Zurich and Bern a red cap made their low status clear. They were also required or forbidden to wear certain shoes, ribbons or veils. As a rule, the colour markings were kept in the so-called shame colours: Red, yellow or green. Since "decent" (or "decent and respectable") women were not allowed or allowed to "dress up" in the Middle Ages, prostitutes were also referred to as pretty women.
(Wiki).
Translated with www.deepl.com/Translator
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