picture (); while the housewife sleeps, the household play Scenes of everyday life, now called
genre paintings, prominently feature figures to whom no specific identity can be attached – they are not portraits or intended as historical figures, but rather snapshots of quotidian life. Together with landscape painting, the development and enormous popularity of genre painting is the most distinctive feature of Dutch painting in this period, although in this case they were also very popular in Flemish painting. Many are single figures, such as Vermeer's
The Milkmaid; others may show large groups at some social occasion, or crowds. "Seventeenth-century Holland produced more and better artists dedicated to genre painting with and without messages than any other nation." There were a large number of sub-types within the genre: single figures, peasant families, tavern scenes, "
merry company" parties, women at work about the house, scenes of village or town festivities (though these were still more common in Flemish painting), market scenes, barracks scenes, scenes with horses or farm animals, in snow, by moonlight, and many more. In fact, most of these had specific terms in Dutch, but there was no overall Dutch term equivalent to "genre painting" – until the late 18th century the English often called them "drolleries". Some artists worked mostly within one of these sub-types, especially after about 1625. Over the course of the century, genre paintings tended to reduce in size. Though genre paintings provide many insights into the daily life of 17th-century citizens of all classes, their accuracy cannot always be taken for granted. Typically they show what art historians term a "reality effect" rather than an actual realist depiction; the degree to which this is the case varies between artists. Many paintings which seem only to depict everyday scenes actually illustrated Dutch proverbs and sayings or conveyed a moralistic message – the meaning of which may now need to be deciphered by art historians, though some are clear enough. Many artists, and no doubt purchasers, certainly tried to have things both ways, enjoying the depiction of disorderly households or brothel scenes, while providing a moral interpretation – the works of
Jan Steen, whose other profession was as an innkeeper, are an example. The balance between these elements is still debated by art historians today. (1625), punning visually on the
lute in this brothel scene The titles given later to paintings often distinguish between "
taverns" or "
inns" and "
brothels", but in practice these were very often the same establishments, as many taverns had rooms above or behind set aside for sexual purposes: "Inn in front; brothel behind" was a Dutch
proverb. The Steen above is very clearly an
exemplum, and though each of the individual components of it is realistically depicted, the overall scene is not a plausible depiction of a real moment; typically, of genre painting, it is a situation that is depicted, and satirized. The
Renaissance tradition of recondite
emblem books had, in the hands of the 17th-century Dutch – almost universally literate in the vernacular, but mostly without education in the classics – turned into the popularist and highly moralistic works of
Jacob Cats,
Roemer Visscher, and others, often based in popular
proverbs. The illustrations to these are often quoted directly in paintings, and since the start of the 20th century art historians have attached proverbs, sayings and mottoes to a great number of genre works. Another popular source of meaning is visual puns using the great number of Dutch
slang terms in the sexual area: the
vagina could be represented by a
lute (
luit) or
stocking (
kous), and sex by a bird (
vogelen), among many other options, and purely visual symbols such as shoes, spouts, and jugs and flagons on their side. ,
Peasants in an Interior (1661) The same painters often painted works in a very different spirit of housewives or other women at rest in the home or at work – they massively outnumber similar treatments of men. In fact, working-class men going about their jobs are notably absent from Dutch Golden Age art, with landscapes populated by travellers and idlers but rarely tillers of the soil. Despite the Dutch Republic being the most important nation in international trade in Europe, and the abundance of marine paintings, scenes of dock workers and other commercial activities are very rare. This group of subjects was a Dutch invention, reflecting the cultural preoccupations of the age, and was to be adopted by artists from other countries, especially France, in the two centuries following. The tradition developed from the realism and detailed background activity of Early Netherlandish painting, which
Hieronymus Bosch and
Pieter Bruegel the Elder were among the first to turn into their principal subjects, also making use of proverbs. The
Haarlem painters
Willem Pieterszoon Buytewech,
Frans Hals and
Esaias van de Velde were important painters early in the period. Buytewech painted "
merry companies" of finely dressed young people, with moralistic significance lurking in the detail. , ''The Hunter's Gift'', , a study in marital relations, with a visual pun. Van de Velde was also important as a landscapist, whose scenes included unglamorous figures very different from those in his genre paintings, which were typically set at garden parties in country houses. Hals was principally a portraitist, but also painted genre figures of a portrait size early in his career. A stay in Haarlem by the Flemish master of peasant tavern scenes
Adriaen Brouwer, from 1625 or 1626, gave
Adriaen van Ostade his lifelong subject, though he often took a more sentimental approach. Before Brouwer, peasants had normally been depicted outdoors; he usually shows them in a plain and dim interior, though van Ostade's sometimes occupy ostentatiously decrepit farmhouses of enormous size. Van Ostade was as likely to paint a single figure as a group, as were the Utrecht Caravaggisti in their genre works, and the single figure, or small groups of two or three became increasingly common, especially those including women and children. The most notable woman artist of the period,
Judith Leyster (1609–1660), specialized in these, before her husband,
Jan Miense Molenaer, prevailed on her to give up painting. The
Leiden school of
fijnschilder ("fine painters") were renowned for small and highly finished paintings, many of this type. Leading artists included
Gerard Dou,
Gabriel Metsu,
Frans van Mieris the Elder, and later his son
Willem van Mieris,
Godfried Schalcken, and
Adriaen van der Werff. This later generation, whose work now seems over-refined compared to their predecessors, also painted portraits and histories, and were the most highly regarded and rewarded Dutch painters by the end of the period, whose works were sought after all over Europe. Genre paintings reflected the increasing prosperity of Dutch society, and settings grew steadily more comfortable, opulent and carefully depicted as the century progressed. Artists not part of the Leiden group whose common subjects also were more intimate genre groups included
Nicolaes Maes,
Gerard ter Borch and
Pieter de Hooch, whose interest in light in interior scenes was shared with
Jan Vermeer, long a very obscure figure, but now the most highly regarded genre painter of all. File:Hendrick_Avercamp_-_Winterlandschap_met_ijsvermaak.jpg|The mute
Hendrick Avercamp painted almost exclusively winter scenes of crowds seen from some distance. File:Pieter de Hooch - The Courtyard of a House in Delft.jpg|
Pieter de Hooch,
Courtyard of a House in Delft, 1658, a study in domestic virtue, texture and spatial complexity. The woman is a servant. File:Judith Leyster A Boy and a Girl with a Cat and an Eel.jpg|
Judith Leyster,
A Boy and a Girl with a Cat and an Eel; various references to proverbs or emblems have been suggested. File:The idle servant.jpg|
Nicolaes Maes,
The idle servant; housemaid troubles were the subject of several of Maes' works. ==Landscapes and cityscapes==