The Bamboccianti were genre painters active in Rome from about 1625 until the end of the seventeenth century. Most were Dutch and Flemish artists who brought existing traditions of depicting peasant subjects from sixteenth-century Netherlandish art with them to Italy, and generally created small cabinet paintings or etchings of the everyday life of the lower classes in Rome and its countryside.
Roman Carnival by Jan Miel, 1653
Hunter at Rest by Pieter van Laer
The Small Limekiln (Landscape with Morra Players) attributed to Jan Both
Roman Streetscene with a Young Artist by Michiel Sweerts
Genre art is the pictorial representation in any of various media of scenes or events from everyday life, such as markets, domestic settings, interiors, parties, inn scenes, work, and street scenes. Such representations may be realistic, imagined, or romanticized by the artist. Some variations of the term genre art specify the medium or type of visual work, as in genre painting, genre prints, genre photographs, and so on.
The Idle Servant; housemaid troubles were the subject of several of Nicolaes Maes' works.
Peasant Dance, c. 1568, oil on wood, by Pieter Brueghel the Elder
Merry Company, by Dirck Hals
Interior with woman by Wybrand Hendriks