Caspar Netscher (1639–1684), Dutch, Though not a household name today, this Dutch Golden Age painter carved out a distinctive niche with his meticulously detailed genre scenes and portraits. Trained under Gerard ter Borch, he absorbed the delicate treatment of fabrics and intimate domestic interiors that would become hallmarks of his work. Early influences also included the Leiden fine painters, evident in his polished technique and fondness for rendering textures—silks, lace, and marble—with almost tactile precision. Unlike many contemporaries who favored biblical or mythological grandeur, he found poetry in quieter moments: a lacemaker bent over her craft, a mother adjusting her child’s collar, or a musician pausing mid-song. These vignettes, often lit by soft, diffused light, exude a warmth that feels both universal and deeply personal. Later, as demand for portraits grew among European aristocracy, he adapted seamlessly, infusing even formal commissions with psychological depth. His sitters seem caught in unguarded instants—a raised eyebrow, a half-smile—rather than stiffly posed. Despite dying young at 45, his legacy persisted through pupils like Godfried Schalcken. While overshadowed by titans like Vermeer, his work offers a quieter counterpoint to the era’s drama, proving that intimacy, too, can be monumental.