«Уличный лекарь»
This painting has an author's signature: in the lower right corner of the canvas, on the image of a wheelbarrow. At least three modified versions of her composition are known: in the Amsterdam Historical Museum (dated 1654), in the Leipzig Museum of Fine Arts and exhibited in the 1970s at an auction in Wiesbaden. The same painting came to our museum from the collection of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in 1962 as a result of an exchange.
The image of the wandering healer has been found in the fine art of the Netherlands very early on. Jan Vickers painted this popular moral theme more than once, using the same models in his compositions, but changing the poses and roles of the latter. In the Serpukhov version, the author clearly shifts the satirical emphasis from the figure of the doctor to the crowd: a gathering of irresponsible onlookers who did not come for treatment at all, but for idle fun.
In the central part of the painting, a woman is depicted, so engrossed in the spectacle that she does not feel like a boy is stealing grapes from her basket — an ancient symbol of Christ (The Gospel of John, chapter 15 — a sign of hidden grace and atonement for sins). In the Western European culture of the early Modern period, the wandering healer was the personification of cheating. Compare the old saying: "Lie like a dentist." Grapes, which are quite rare in the north, were perceived by the Dutch symbolically, and above all as a Christian image. So, this figure embodies the blindness of humanity, attracted by idle fuss, penny temptations, and imperceptibly losing spiritual values.