Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Joy alights on the faces of a crowd of children staring spellbound up at a rommel-pot player. A rommel pot is a musical instrument made out of an earthenware jar with a stick inserted through an animal skin covering. The player rotates and rubs the stick to produce a droning noise akin to a duck call. It was often played during Shrovetide, the festive period before the start of Lent, also known as Carnival. This street performer wears a foxtail hat, a traditional attribute of a fool, highlighting the silliness of the occasion. Frans Hals’s workshop produced multiple versions of this scene, which was likely popular for the way the artist captured childhood delight.
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Frans Hals — Young Man and Woman in an Inn
Frans Hals — De vrolijke drinker
Frans Hals — The Smoker
Judith Leyster — De vrolijke drinker
Frans Hals — Merrymakers at Shrovetide
Willem Pietersz Buytewech — Elegant Couples Courting
Le Nain (French) — Peasant Children Dancing
The Lute Player
Adriaen Brouwer — The Smokers
Adriaen van Ostade — The Merry Peasant
Gerard van Honthorst — Een vrolijke vioolspeler
Rembrandt van Rijn — De vaandeldrager