Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
David Teniers the Younger was a popular artist who specialized in small paintings of rustic Flemish life in the 1600s. In works such as Peasants Smoking in an Inn , an older man and a younger man in the foreground smoke tobacco. The younger man rests limply against the wall and his head lolls back, a gesture that symbolized that he had overindulged in smoke. Another standing man prepares his pipe and watches the younger man with amusement. Tobacco was a novelty in the 1600s, introduced from the Americas and East Indies with other new imports such as sugar cane and rice, and was believed to be a medicinal product. It was particularly recommended for people who lived in "waterish places" such as Antwerp, the capital of Flanders, where Teniers painted this scene. Although many medical practitioners believed tobacco to be a cure for numerous ailments, moral opponents to smoking criticized it as a danger to health and morals. The mixed reputation and widespread popularity of tobacco smoking thus made it a marketable and amusing subject for Flemish artists such as Teniers.
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David Teniers (II) — Mason Smoking with Companions in a Tave
Abraham Diepraam — De gelagkamer
Adriaen Brouwer — The Smokers
Ernest Meissonier — The Card Players
Johannes Natus — The card players
Le Nain (French) — Peasant Children Dancing
Elderly Man Seated in a Tavern
Adriaen van Ostade — Rustende reizigers
Adriaen Brouwer — Poor Folk Drinking in a Tavern
David Teniers the Younger — Guardroom with the Deliverance o
David Teniers the Younger — The Flageolet Player
Maerten Stoop — An Officer in Billeted Quarters