17th Century Netherlandish Art
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Recent papers in 17th Century Netherlandish Art
Several series of Sibyls, of variable number and quality, that have been previously attributed to different painters within Peter Paul Rubens’ circle, in foreign and Spanish collections, as well as in the art market, are here claimed to... more
Van Dyck’s paintings have been thoroughly analyzed in terms of style, iconography and patronage, but there has been no systematic analysis of how these pictures were recorded in Stuart inventories. Pictures attributed to Van Dyck are... more
Title: Figuring Faith and Female Power in the Art of Rubens Author: J. Vanessa Lyon Series: Visual & Material Culture, 1300-1700 Publisher: Amsterdam University Press Figuring Faith and Female Power in the Art of Rubens argues that the... more
The marriage of Henrietta Maria (1609-1669) and Charles I (1600-1649) was presented in literature and prints as the joining of the ‘lily’ (France, the queen) and the ‘rose’ (England, the king). Harnessing these floral analogies, this... more
Carl Borromäus Ruthart (Gdańsk 1630–L’Aquila, after 1703), also known as Karl Ruthard, Carlo Ruttardo and Fra Andrea di Danzica is as fascinating as little known. He was most likely born in Gdańsk where he first learned to draw and paint,... more
World history of the Netherlands and Flanders: about the (im)possibility of an open, global, and non-nationalist history for a wider audience Following the success of the Histoire mondiale de la France, 2018 saw the publication of the... more
The most unusual of Van Dyck’s four portraits of James Stuart is that in the Musée du Louvre, Paris, in which he proffers a fruit. Here identified as a quince, symbol of marriage, it allows the painting to be accurately dated. The... more
De Amersfoortseweg werd rond het midden van de Gouden Eeuw aangelegd op de uitgestrekte heide tussen Amersfoort en Utrecht. Jacob van Campen, de architect van onder meer het Amsterdamse stadhuis, was de bedenker van de weg.... more
In: Handelingen Koninklijke Geschied- en Oudheidkundige Kring van Kortrijk 77 (2012), p. 107-119.
La carrera de las artistas mujeres fue con frecuencia confinada a permanecer oculta por una historia del arte que prefirió resaltar los logros masculinos englobados dentro de un canon preestablecido. Las pocas veces que lograron... more
Research report for Stedelijk Museum Breda: From a low perspective, with the horizon positioned at the bottommost quarter of the canvas, the viewer looks upon the scene as if standing alongside the artist on a river bank. Four ships... more
PhD Thesis, defended on April 7, 2015; Universiteit van Amsterdam; supervisors: prof.dr. Eric Jan Sluijter, dr. Arjan de Koomen; (Title page, Table of contents, Summary: for the entire thesis, contact me).
This year marks the quadricentenary of the first confirmed European arrival in Western Australia. On 25 October 1616, Dutch skipper Dirk Hartog and his crew landed at the northern tip of the island now named Dirk Hartog, in Shark Bay.... more
Download the Introduction here! Millions of paintings were produced in the Dutch Republic. The works that we know and see in museums today constitute only the tip of the iceberg — the top-quality part. But what else was painted? This... more
"How did painters and their public speak about art in Rembrandt’s age? This book about the writings of the painter-poet Samuel van Hoogstraten, one of Rembrandt’s pupils, examines a wide variety of themes from painting practice and theory... more
The tile decorations in the cloister of the monastery of Sao Francisco in Salvador, based on the engravings to Otto Vaenius' Quinti Horati Flacci Emblemata (1607), have largely escaped the attention of scholars focusing on the reception... more
Now Online and in higher resolution: http://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/buettner2006 Trotz der Fülle bekannter biographischer Details ist nur in Ansätzen erklärt, wie Rubens seine Berühmtheit erlangte. Bislang sind die individuellen... more
Compilation of 2636 artworks (sculptures, reliefs, paintings, frescoes, drawings, prints and illustrations) of 728 identified artists of the Low Countries, from the Middle Ages to Modern Times. 202 pp. With an Index of Artists, a... more
in: J. van Campen en Titus Eliens (red.), Chinese and Japanese Porcelain for the Dutch Golden Age, Amsterdam: Rijksmuseum, 2014, pp. 213-229, 265-268.
"This essay takes up touch and intimacy as the criteria most fundamental to the design and intended impact of flower paintings. My contention is twofold. Firstly, the flower still life as a picture intimates a gesture of reciprocal... more
The essay examines Rembrandt's depiction of physicality and sexuality. The author points out how much these forms of representation are determined by Christian tradition and thus express the finiteness and frailty of the body, but also... more
A short biography (ATTENTION: consult the updated version of this biography on the website of the Leiden Collection)
Accompanying the related exhibition, Leiden circa 1630: Rembrandt Emerges illuminates the early career of Rembrandt and his peers. Essays explore the artists in broader contexts, including Leiden’s historical and cultural profile,... more
"Shells begin as movable dwellings for the mollusks who create them, but where a shell ends up is far from predetermined. They may go on to have many lives once their makers have left them behind. Whether subsumed into the geological... more
In several of the 100‐plus drawings that Haarlem artist Maerten van Heemskerck made while he was in Rome in the 1530s, he depicts the sculpture collections he visited in the Vatican, on the Capitoline and in the cortili and gardens of... more
In a quest as rigorous and novel as the artist's, Ernst van de Wetering reveals how Rembrandt became the revolutionary painter that would continue to fascinate the art world. This ground breaking exploration reconstructs Rembrandt's... more
In Francisco de Holanda’s original account, Michelangelo asserts that the art of the Northerners is only suitable for the feeble-minded and has a strong emotional effect on them, for it concentrates on the mere surface of things and on... more