More about The Drunken Couple

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Like writers who are told to “write what they know,” Jan Steen painted what he knew. Having been raised in a tavern, what he knew was drunks.  

Though the drunks in his paintings always seem to be having a grand time, there is usually a moralizing metaphor hidden within the composition dissing his sloshed subjects.

The Drunken Couple is no exception to Steen’s typical alcohol-induced allegories. An all-too-familiar scene for those of us who can actually remember our intoxicating college days, we see what appears to be the end of an after-hours house party. The hostess has passed out with a burning pipe in her hand while the host toasts an empty house, both unaware that their departing guests are in the process of stealing their stuff.

If the thieves and burning pipe weren’t enough clues that these people are wasted to the point of idiocy, Steen has left the viewer additional hints. On the wall is a small picture of an owl, an image associated in the 17th century with stupidity because of their inability to see during the day even things that are close by. Like mice and burglars and junk. Additionally, cats were a common symbol of danger or misconduct in Dutch painting. So that concerned looking cat staring at its mistresses’ pipe? Definitely a warning to the viewer that this house may soon be as lit as its owners.

 

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Here is what Wikipedia says about The Drunken Couple

The Drunken Couple is an oil-on-oak-panel painting by Jan Steen, painted c.1655–1665 and now in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. It depicts a drunken couple so inebriated that they are completely unaware of the intruders skulking in the background. The theme is reinforced by the print of an owl above their heads; in the 17th century the owl was a metaphor for being stupid and blind, reputedly not able to see in the daytime.

Adriaan van der Hoop donated it and the rest of his collection to the city of Amsterdam in 1854. It was initially assigned to the Museum van der Hoop before being moved to its present home on 30 June 1885.

Check out the full Wikipedia article about The Drunken Couple