Pieter Bout was a Flemish painter born in Brussels in 1658. He is known for his landscape paintings and works depicting village festivals, markets, and other outdoor scenes. Bout was a pupil of the landscape painter Adam Frans van der Meulen, whose influence is evident in Bout's use of color and composition. He often collaborated with other artists, such as Adriaen Frans Boudewyns, who would paint the landscapes, while Bout would add the figures and animals to the scenes. This collaborative approach was not uncommon during this period and allowed for a division of labor that played to each artist's strengths. Bout's career took him beyond his native Brussels. He traveled to Paris, where he worked and continued to develop his style, which was characterized by a lively and detailed depiction of the everyday life of the people within his landscapes. His paintings often captured the joyous and festive atmosphere of the peasant class, reflecting a Dutch Golden Age influence, even though Bout was active in the later 17th and early 18th centuries. After his time in Paris, Bout returned to Brussels, where he continued to paint and contribute to the Flemish art scene. His works were appreciated for their narrative quality and the vivid way in which they brought rural festivities and market scenes to life. Despite the popularity of his works during his lifetime, Pieter Bout did not establish a lasting school or have a significant number of followers. His death in 1719 marked the end of an artistic career that had spanned over six decades, leaving behind a body of work that remains of interest to art historians and collectors of Flemish genre painting.