Pieter Codde was one of the most significant genre painters of his generation in Amsterdam, renowned for his depictions of elegant gatherings, with fashionably dressed people gaming, playing music and dancing. This small panel is a charming example of the lively, engaging scenes of daily life for which the painter became so well known. Along with Willem Cornelisz Duyster, Codde’s genre pictures grew in popularity during the 1620s, and by the 1630s he had firmly secured his reputation as one of the leading exponents of such subjects in his native city. Well versed in concurrent developments within the genre, led by artists like Willem Pieterszoon Buytewech, Codde’s pictures laid the foundations for later generations of painters continuing to perfect genre painting in the Netherlands, like Gerard ter Borch and Johannes Vermeer.
During the 1630s, the Dutch Republic had entered an era of unprecedented prosperity. Scenes such as this, showing contemporary figures engaged in leisurely pursuits, frequently masked risqué double meanings or moralising messages, and were enjoyed as reflections on refined society, as well as providing an opportunity to vicariously participate within it. Dr. Fred G. Meijer, to whom we are grateful, dates this work to circa 1640, at which time Codde adopted somewhat broader brushwork, also noting a portrait-like quality to the depiction of the central figure, which equally bears a resemblance to other models used by the artist.