Mostly producing small social
genre paintings with humorous, cartoon-like features, ranging from elegant
merry companies to
guardroom scenes with officers and (most numerous) groups of peasants or beggars, in a variety of styles which can be related to those of leading artists in these genres, but with personal aspects in the colouring and style. They "are heavily and powerfully rendered in warm shades of brown, set off by strong local colouring in the principal figures. His successful peasant scenes are characterized by the use of strong
chiaroscuro and a gentle, harmonious palette. The caricatural quality of Quast’s peasants recalls the work of his fellow-resident of The Hague,
Adriaen van de Venne, but Quast’s looser style and many of his individual types are closer to the paintings of
Adriaen Brouwer, as well as of
Adriaen van Ostade, to whom Quast’s best work has sometimes been ascribed". Quast was influenced by the French engrapher
Jacques Callot and even called the Dutch Callot. With his caricatured images on often small panels, Quast provided commentary on the Golden Age. He produced finished drawings for sale, often on
parchment, and these included landscapes, cityscapes and biblical scenes. Some of his works were engraved, likely by
Salomon Savery. ==References==