Two Peasants with a Glass of Wine

Provenance

Camil. II Gonzaga.[1] (J. Baer, New York).[2] (Gallery Sanct Lucas, Vienna); sold 1965 to Nell V. [Mrs. Robert M.] Weidenhammer, Rockville, Maryland; gift (partial and promised) 1992 to NGA; gift completed 2003. [1] This reference stems from a wax seal on the verso of the painting. [2] Information contained in a letter dated 5 July 1965 from B.J.A. Renckens, Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie, to Dr. R. Herzig of Galerie Sanct Lucas (copy in NGA curatorial files).

Two Peasants with a Glass of Wine

Teniers the Younger, David

c. 1645

Accession Number

1992.27.1

Medium

oil on panel

Dimensions

overall: 23.2 x 18.1 cm (9 1/8 x 7 1/8 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

National Gallery of Art

Washington, D.C., United States

Credit Line

Gift of Nell V. Weidenhammer

Tags

Painting Baroque (1600–1750) Oil Painting Panel Painting Flemish

Background & Context

Background Story

Two Peasants with a Glass of Wine is Teniers at his most economical: two figures, a glass of wine, and a minimum of setting combine to create a scene of rustic companionship that is simultaneously a genre painting and a study in social intimacy. The reduced scale and simplified composition allow Teniers to focus on the interaction between the two figures — their gestures, their expressions, and the social dynamics of sharing a glass of wine. The small panel format concentrates the viewer's attention on this intimate exchange, making the painting feel like a window into a private moment rather than a public spectacle.

Cultural Impact

Teniers' small-format paintings of two or three figures are among his most sought-after works because they combine the intimacy of a portrait with the social observation of a genre scene. Two Peasants with a Glass of Wine is a portrait of companionship — not of specific individuals, but of the social bond that sharing a drink creates. The painting's modest scale and reduced composition make it one of the most direct and personal works in Teniers' extensive output.

Why It Matters

Two Peasants with a Glass of Wine is Teniers at his most intimate: two people, one drink, and the social bond that emerges between them. The small panel format concentrates the scene into a single human exchange — the most essential subject in the most essential form.