Gabriel Metsu (born January 1629, Leiden, Netherlands—buried October 24, 1667, Amsterdam) was a Dutch painter of scenes of everyday life who was best known for his use of the window format to frame his subjects.
Metsu was the son of a painter and tapestry designer who died before Metsu was born. He was raised in Leiden by his mother, a midwife, and later also by a stepfather. It is not known precisely when Metsu began his artistic training. It is thought that he was a painter’s apprentice, possibly for Claes Pietersz. de Grebber, by about 1644, when Metsu was a teenager. He became a founding member of the painters’ Guild of St. Luke in Leiden in 1648. The only painting that exists from that early period is Ecce Homo (late 1640s), an oil on panel. Metsu remained in Leiden until about 1650, at which time he relocated temporarily to Utrecht and likely studied with the German-born history painter Nicolaus Knüpfer, who is believed to have also taught Jan Steen. Upon Metsu’s return to Leiden about 1652, he painted interiors composed by using linear perspective and depicting natural light.
Metsu left Leiden probably about 1654 and settled in Amsterdam. There he began painting on a smaller scale and increasing the contrast between light and dark. Metsu painted outdoor markets and interiors, or genre scenes. He also created many paintings of young women engaged in domestic activities, much like his contemporaries Gerrit Dou and Gerard Terborch, who also favoured that subject. Metsu often used his wife as a model, as in his painting Saint Cecilia (1663). Among his better-known works are The Vegetable Market in Amsterdam (1657–61), A Visit to the Nursery (1661), The Sick Child (c. 1664–66), and A Woman Writing a Letter (c. 1664–66).