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 Painting in Holland. 531 Young Lady with the ewer, and the Lady in the satin gown, both in the Dresden Gallery ; Paternal Advice (Con- seil Paternel) of the Amsterdam Museum, of which replicas are in the Berlin Museum and at Bridgwater House. Adriaan Jansz, van Ostade (1610 — 1685), studied under Frans Hals, and formed a friendship with Adriaen Brouwer. Like the latter, he chose his subjects from low life, but he was more laborious and less dissipated, and has accordingly left us more works. Although Van Ostade's usual subjects are similar to those treated by Teniers, he yet differs from Teniers as Rembrandt differs from Rubens. Teniers treats light in the same manner as Rubens, lavishing it everywhere ; Ostade concentrates it, in the style of Rembrandt. His works are chiefly homely scenes from his native country, full of life, spirit, and individuality of character. At Madrid there is a Rural Concert. At S. Petersburg there are about twenty of his pictures, amongst which are three of the valuable series of the Five Senses ; at Dresden among others, two excellent works, a Smoking Scene and a Painter's Studio in a garret, his own, probably ; at Munich, another superior work, a Dutch Alehouse, with peasants fighting, and their wives endeavouring to separate and pacify them ; at Rotterdam, an Old Man in his Study ; at Amsterdam, a Village Assembly ; and lastly, at the Hague, two wonderful pendents, the Interior and Exterior of a rustic house. The Louvre has also a good share of the works of Adriaan van Ostade. The National Gallery has but one picture by him — an Alchymist. The Dulwich College Gallery possesses four of his works. Bartholomeus van der Heist (1613 ?— 1670) lived chiefly at Amsterdam. His chef-d'oeuvre, the Banquet of the Civic M M 2