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Dutch Golden Age painting

Dutch Golden Age painting is the painting of the Dutch Golden Age, a period in Dutch history roughly spanning the 17th century,[1] during and after the later part of the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648) for Dutch independence.

Johannes Vermeer, The Milkmaid (1658–1661)

The new Dutch Republic was the most prosperous nation in Europe and led European trade, science, and art. The northern Netherlandish provinces that made up the new state had traditionally been less important artistic centres than cities in Flanders in the south. The upheavals and large-scale transfers of population of the war, and the sharp break with the old monarchist and Catholic cultural traditions, meant that Dutch art had to reinvent itself almost entirely, a task in which it was very largely successful. The painting of religious subjects declined very sharply, but a large new market for all kinds of secular subjects grew up.

Although Dutch painting of the Golden Age is included in the general European period of Baroque painting, and often shows many of its characteristics, most lacks the idealization and love of splendour typical of much Baroque work, including that of neighbouring Flanders. Most work, including that for which the period is best known, reflects the traditions of detailed realism inherited from Early Netherlandish painting.

Frans Hals' tronie, with the later title Gypsy Girl. 1628–30. Oil on wood, 58 cm × 52 cm (23 in × 20 in). The tronie includes elements of portraiture, genre painting, and sometimes history painting.
The Blinding of Samson, 1636, which Rembrandt gave to Huyghens

A distinctive feature of the period is the proliferation of distinct genres of paintings,[2] with the majority of artists producing the bulk of their work within one of these. The full development of this specialization is seen from the late 1620s, and the period from then until the French invasion of 1672 is the core of Golden Age painting. Artists would spend most of their careers painting only portraits, genre scenes, landscapes, seascapes and ships, or still lifes, and often a particular sub-type within these categories. Many of these types of subjects were new in Western painting, and the way the Dutch painted them in this period was decisive for their future development.

Types of painting edit

 
Paulus Potter, The Young Bull (1647); 3.4 metres wide. An unusually monumental animal painting that challenges the hierarchy of genres.

A distinctive feature of the period, compared to earlier European painting, was the small amount of religious painting. Dutch Calvinism forbade religious painting in churches, and though biblical subjects were acceptable in private homes, relatively few were produced. The other traditional classes of history and portrait painting were present, but the period is more notable for a huge variety of other genres, sub-divided into numerous specialized categories, such as scenes of peasant life, landscapes, townscapes, landscapes with animals, maritime paintings, flower paintings and still lifes of various types. The development of many of these types of painting was decisively influenced by 17th-century Dutch artists.

The widely held theory of the "hierarchy of genres" in painting, whereby some types were regarded as more prestigious than others, led many painters to want to produce history painting. However, this was the hardest to sell, as even Rembrandt found. Many were forced to produce portraits or genre scenes, which sold much more easily. In descending order of status, the categories in the hierarchy were:

The Dutch concentrated heavily on the "lower" categories, but by no means rejected the concept of the hierarchy.[4] Most paintings were relatively small – the only common type of really large paintings were group portraits. Painting directly onto walls hardly existed; when a wall-space in a public building needed decorating, fitted framed canvas was normally used. For the extra precision possible on a hard surface, many painters continued to use wooden panels, sometime after the rest of Western Europe had abandoned them; some used copper plates, usually recycling plates from printmaking. In turn, the number of surviving Golden Age paintings was reduced by them being overpainted with new works by artists throughout the 18th and 19th century – poor ones were usually cheaper than a new canvas, stretcher and frame.

There was very little Dutch sculpture during the period; it is mostly found in tomb monuments and attached to public buildings, and small sculptures for houses are a noticeable gap, their place taken by silverware and ceramics. Painted delftware tiles were very cheap and common, if rarely of really high quality, but silver, especially in the auricular style, led Europe. With this exception, the best artistic efforts were concentrated on painting and printmaking.

The art world edit

 
Dirck Hals, genre scene of Gentlemen Smoking and Playing Backgammon in a Tavern. Note: see also here.

Foreigners remarked on the enormous quantities of art produced and the large fairs where many paintings were sold – it has been roughly estimated that over 1.3 million Dutch pictures were painted in the 20 years after 1640 alone.[5] The volume of production meant that prices were fairly low, except for the best known artists; as in most subsequent periods, there was a steep price gradient for more fashionable artists.[6] Those without a strong contemporary reputation, or who had fallen out of fashion, including many now considered among the greatest of the period, such as Vermeer, Frans Hals and Rembrandt in his last years, had considerable problems earning a living, and died poor; many artists had other jobs, or abandoned art entirely.[7] In particular the French invasion of 1672 (the Rampjaar, or "year of disaster"), brought a severe depression to the art market, which never quite returned to earlier heights.[8]

The distribution of pictures was very wide: "yea many tymes, blacksmithes, cobblers etts., will have some picture or other by their Forge and in their stalle. Such is the generall Notion, enclination and delight that these Countrie Native have to Painting" reported an English traveller in 1640.[9] There were for virtually the first time many professional art dealers, several also significant artists, like Vermeer and his father, Jan van Goyen and Willem Kalf. Rembrandt's dealer Hendrick van Uylenburgh and his son Gerrit were among the most important. Landscapes were the easiest uncommissioned works to sell, and their painters were the "common footmen in the Army of Art" according to Samuel van Hoogstraten.[10]

 
The Haarlem Painter's Guild in 1675, by Jan de Bray, whose self-portrait is the second from the left

The technical quality of Dutch artists was generally high, still mostly following the old medieval system of training by apprenticeship with a master. Typically, workshops were smaller than in Flanders or Italy, with only one or two apprentices at a time, the number often being restricted by guild regulations. The turmoil of the early years of the Republic, with displaced artists from the south moving north and the loss of traditional markets in the court and church, led to a resurgence of artists guilds, often still called the Guild of Saint Luke. In many cases these involved the artists extricating themselves from medieval groupings where they shared a guild with several other trades, such as housepainting. Several new guilds were established in the period: Amsterdam in 1579, Haarlem in 1590, and Gouda, Rotterdam, Utrecht and Delft between 1609 and 1611.[11] The Leiden authorities distrusted guilds and did not allow one until 1648.[12]

Later in the century it began to become clear to all involved that the old idea of a guild controlling both training and sales no longer worked well, and gradually the guilds were replaced with academies, often only concerned with the training of artists. The Hague, with the court, was an early example, where artists split into two groups in 1656 with the founding of the Confrerie Pictura. With the obvious exception of portraits, many more Dutch paintings were done "speculatively" without a specific commission than was then the case in other countries – one of many ways in which the Dutch art market showed the future.[13]

 
Aert de Gelder, Self-portrait as Zeuxis (1685)

There were many dynasties of artists, and many married the daughters of their masters or other artists. Many artists came from well-off families, who paid fees for their apprenticeships, and they often married into property. Rembrandt and Jan Steen were both enrolled at the University of Leiden for a while. Several cities had distinct styles and specialities by subject, but Amsterdam was the largest artistic centre, because of its great wealth.[14] Cities such as Haarlem and Utrecht were more important in the first half of the century, with Leiden and other cities emerging after 1648, and above all Amsterdam, which increasingly drew to it artists from the rest of the Netherlands, as well as Flanders and Germany.[15]

Dutch artists were strikingly less concerned about artistic theory than those of many nations, and less given to discussing their art; it appears that there was also much less interest in artistic theory in general intellectual circles and among the wider public than was by then common in Italy.[16] As nearly all commissions and sales were private, and between bourgeois individuals whose accounts have not been preserved, these are also less well documented than elsewhere. But Dutch art was a source of national pride, and the major biographers are crucial sources of information. These are Karel van Mander (Het Schilderboeck, 1604), who essentially covers the previous century, and Arnold Houbraken (De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen – "The Great Theatre of Dutch Painters", 1718–21). Both followed, and indeed exceeded, Vasari in including a great number of short lives of artists – over 500 in Houbraken's case – and both are considered generally accurate on factual matters.

The German artist Joachim von Sandrart (1606–1688) had worked for periods in Holland, and his Deutsche Akademie in the same format covers many Dutch artists he knew. Houbraken's master, and Rembrandt's pupil, was Samuel van Hoogstraten (1627–1678), whose Zichtbare wereld and Inleyding tot de Hooge Schoole der Schilderkonst (1678) contain more critical than biographical information and are among the most important treatises on painting of the period. Like other Dutch works on the theory of art, they expound many commonplaces of Renaissance theory and do not entirely reflect contemporary Dutch art, still often concentrating on history painting.[17]

History painting edit

 
Jacob van Loo, Danaë (compare Rembrandt's treatment)

This category comprises not only paintings that depicted historical events of the past, but also paintings that showed biblical, mythological, literary and allegorical scenes. Recent historical events essentially fell out of the category, and were treated in a realist fashion, as the appropriate combination of portraits with marine, townscape or landscape subjects.[18] Large dramatic historical or Biblical scenes were produced less frequently than in other countries, as there was no local market for church art, and few large aristocratic Baroque houses to fill. More than that, the Protestant population of major cities had been exposed to some remarkably hypocritical uses of Mannerist allegory in unsuccessful Habsburg propaganda during the Dutch Revolt, which had produced a strong reaction towards realism and a distrust of grandiose visual rhetoric.[19] History painting was now a "minority art", although to an extent this was redressed by a relatively keen interest in print versions of history subjects.[20]

More than in other types of painting, Dutch history painters continued to be influenced by Italian painting. Prints and copies of Italian masterpieces circulated and suggested certain compositional schemes. The growing Dutch skill in the depiction of light was brought to bear on styles derived from Italy, notably that of Caravaggio. Some Dutch painters also travelled to Italy, though this was less common than with their Flemish contemporaries, as can be seen from the membership of the Bentvueghels club in Rome.[13]

 
Utrecht Caravaggism: Dirck van Baburen, Christ crowned with thorns, 1623, for a convent in Utrecht, not a market available in most of Holland.

In the early part of the century many Northern Mannerist artists with styles formed in the previous century continued to work, until the 1630s in the cases of Abraham Bloemaert and Joachim Wtewael.[21] Many history paintings were small in scale, with the German painter (based in Rome) Adam Elsheimer as much an influence as Caravaggio (both died in 1610) on Dutch painters like Pieter Lastman, Rembrandt's master, and Jan and Jacob Pynas. Compared to Baroque history painting from other countries, they shared the Dutch emphasis on realism, and narrative directness, and are sometimes known as the "Pre-Rembrandtists", as Rembrandt's early paintings were in this style.[22]

Utrecht Caravaggism describes a group of artists who produced both history painting and generally large genre scenes in an Italian-influenced style, often making heavy use of chiaroscuro. Utrecht, before the revolt the most important city in the new Dutch territory, was an unusual Dutch city, still about 40% Catholic in the mid-century, even more among the elite groups, who included many rural nobility and gentry with town houses there.[23] The leading artists were Hendrick ter Brugghen, Gerard van Honthorst and Dirck van Baburen, and the school was active about 1630, although van Honthorst continued until the 1650s as a successful court painter to the English, Dutch and Danish courts in a more classical style.[24]

Rembrandt began as a history painter before finding financial success as a portraitist, and he never relinquished his ambitions in this area. A great number of his etchings are of narrative religious scenes, and the story of his last history commission, The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis (1661) illustrates both his commitment to the form and the difficulties he had in finding an audience.[25] Several artists, many his pupils, attempted with some success to continue his very personal style; Govaert Flinck was the most successful. Gerard de Lairesse (1640–1711) was another of these, before falling under heavy influence from French classicism, and becoming its leading Dutch proponent as both artist and theoretician.[26]

Nudity was effectively the preserve of the history painter, although many portraitists dressed up their occasional nudes (nearly always female) with a classical title, as Rembrandt did. For all their uninhibited suggestiveness, genre painters rarely revealed more than a generous cleavage or stretch of thigh, usually when painting prostitutes or "Italian" peasants.

Portraits edit

 
Bartholomeus van der Helst, Sophia Trip (1645), a member of one of the wealthiest families in Holland.[27]

Portrait painting thrived in the Netherlands in the 17th century, as there was a large mercantile class who were far more ready to commission portraits than their equivalents in other countries; a summary of various estimates of total production arrives at between 750,000 and 1,100,000 portraits.[28] Rembrandt enjoyed his greatest period of financial success as a young Amsterdam portraitist, but like other artists, grew rather bored with painting commissioned portraits of burghers: "artists travel along this road without delight", according to van Mander.[29]

While Dutch portrait painting avoids the swagger and excessive rhetoric of the aristocratic Baroque portraiture current in the rest of 17th-century Europe, the sombre clothing of male and in many cases female sitters, and the Calvinist feeling that the inclusion of props, possessions or views of land in the background would show the sin of pride leads to an undeniable sameness in many Dutch portraits, for all their technical quality. Even a standing pose is usually avoided, as a full-length might also show pride. Poses are undemonstrative, especially for women, though children may be allowed more freedom. The classic moment for having a portrait painted was upon marriage, when the new husband and wife more often than not occupied separate frames in a pair of paintings. Rembrandt's later portraits compel by force of characterization, and sometimes a narrative element, but even his early portraits can be dispiriting en masse, as in the roomful of 'starter Rembrandts' donated to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

 
Frans Hals, Willem Heythuijsen (1634), 47 cm × 37 cm (19 in × 15 in).
 
Jan Mijtens, family portrait, 1652, with the boys in "picturesque" dress

The other great portraitist of the period is Frans Hals, whose famously lively brushwork and ability to show sitters looking relaxed and cheerful adds excitement to even the most unpromising subjects. The extremely "nonchalant pose" of his portrait of Willem Heythuijsen is exceptional: "no other portrait from this period is so informal".[30] The sitter was a wealthy textile merchant who had already commissioned Hals' only individual life-sized full-length portrait ten years before. In this much smaller work for a private chamber he wears riding clothes.[31] Jan de Bray encouraged his sitters to pose costumed as figures from classical history, but many of his works are of his own family. Thomas de Keyser, Bartholomeus van der Helst, Ferdinand Bol and others, including many mentioned below as history or genre painters, did their best to enliven more conventional works. Portraiture, less affected by fashion than other types of painting, remained the safe fallback for Dutch artists.

From what little we know of the studio procedures of artists, it seems that, as elsewhere in Europe, the face was probably drawn and perhaps painted at an initial sitting or two. The typical number of further sittings is unclear - between zero (for a Rembrandt full-length) and 50 appear documented. The clothes were left at the studio and might well be painted by assistants, or a brought-in specialist master, although, or because, they were regarded as a very important part of the painting.[32] Married and never-married women can be distinguished by their dress, highlighting how few single women were painted, except in family groups.[33] As elsewhere, the accuracy of the clothes shown is variable - striped and patterned clothes were worn, but artists rarely show them, understandably avoiding the extra work.[34] Lace and ruff collars were unavoidable and presented a formidable challenge to painters' intent on realism. Rembrandt evolved a more effective way of painting patterned lace, laying in broad white stokes, and then painting lightly in black to show the pattern. Another way of doing this was to paint in white over a black layer and scratch off the white with the end of the brush to show the pattern.[35]

At the end of the century there was a fashion for showing sitters in a semi-fancy dress, begun in England by van Dyck in the 1630s, known as "picturesque" or "Roman" dress.[36] Aristocratic, and militia, sitters allowed themselves more freedom in bright dress and expansive settings than burghers, and religious affiliations probably affected many depictions. By the end of the century aristocratic, or French, values were spreading among the burghers, and depictions were allowed more freedom and display.

A distinctive type of painting, combining elements of the portrait, history, and genre painting was the tronie. This was usually a half-length of a single figure which concentrated on capturing an unusual mood or expression. The actual identity of the model was not supposed to be important, but they might represent a historical figure and be in exotic or historic costume. Jan Lievens and Rembrandt, many of whose self-portraits are also tronies (especially his etched ones), were among those who developed the genre.

Family portraits tended, as in Flanders, to be set outdoors in gardens, but without an extensive view as later in England, and to be relatively informal in dress and mood. Group portraits, largely a Dutch invention, were popular among the large numbers of civic associations that were a notable part of Dutch life, such as the officers of a city's schutterij or militia guards, boards of trustees and regents of guilds and charitable foundations and the like. Especially in the first half of the century, portraits were very formal and stiff in composition. Groups were often seated around a table, each person looking at the viewer. Much attention was paid to fine details in clothing, and where applicable, to furniture and other signs of a person's position in society. Later in the century groups became livelier and colours brighter. Rembrandt's Syndics of the Drapers' Guild is a subtle treatment of a group round a table.

 
The Meagre Company, an Amsterdam militia group portrait or schutterstuk by Frans Hals and Pieter Codde (1633-37)
 
Bartholomeus van der Helst, Banquet of the Amsterdam Civic Guard in Celebration of the Peace of Münster, 1648; 5.47 metres wide

Scientists often posed with instruments and objects of their study around them. Physicians sometimes posed together around a cadaver, a so-called 'Anatomical Lesson', the most famous one being Rembrandt's Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp (1632, Mauritshuis, The Hague). Boards of trustees in their regentenstuk portraits preferred an image of austerity and humility, posing in dark clothing (which by its refinement testified to their prominent standing in society), often seated around a table, with solemn expressions on their faces.

Most militia group portraits were commissioned in Haarlem and Amsterdam and were much more flamboyant and relaxed or even boisterous than other types of portraits, as well as much larger. Early examples showed them dining, but later groups showed most figures standing for a more dynamic composition. Rembrandt's famous The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq better known as the Night Watch (1642), was an ambitious and not entirely successful attempt to show a group in action, setting out for a patrol or parade, also innovative in avoiding the typical very wide format of such works.

The cost of group portraits was usually shared by the subjects, often not equally. The amount paid might determine each person's place in the picture, either head to toe in full regalia in the foreground or face only in the back of the group. Sometimes all group members paid an equal sum, which was likely to lead to quarrels when some members gained a more prominent place in the picture than others. In Amsterdam most of these paintings would ultimately end up in the possession of the city council, and many are now on display in the Amsterdams Historisch Museum; there are no significant examples outside the Netherlands.

Scenes of everyday life edit

 
A typical Jan Steen picture (c. 1663); while the housewife sleeps, the household play[37]

Scenes of everyday life, now called genre paintings, prominently feature figures to whom no specific identity can be attached – they are not portraits or intended as historical figures, but rather snapshots of quotidian life. Together with landscape painting, the development and enormous popularity of genre painting is the most distinctive feature of Dutch painting in this period, although in this case they were also very popular in Flemish painting. Many are single figures, such as Vermeer's The Milkmaid; others may show large groups at some social occasion, or crowds.

"Seventeenth-century Holland produced more and better artists dedicated to genre painting with and without messages than any other nation."[38] There were a large number of sub-types within the genre: single figures, peasant families, tavern scenes, "merry company" parties, women at work about the house, scenes of village or town festivities (though these were still more common in Flemish painting), market scenes, barracks scenes, scenes with horses or farm animals, in snow, by moonlight, and many more. In fact, most of these had specific terms in Dutch, but there was no overall Dutch term equivalent to "genre painting" – until the late 18th century the English often called them "drolleries".[39] Some artists worked mostly within one of these sub-types, especially after about 1625.[40] Over the course of the century, genre paintings tended to reduce in size.

Though genre paintings provide many insights into the daily life of 17th-century citizens of all classes, their accuracy cannot always be taken for granted.[41] Typically they show what art historians term a "reality effect" rather than an actual realist depiction; the degree to which this is the case varies between artists. Many paintings which seem only to depict everyday scenes actually illustrated Dutch proverbs and sayings or conveyed a moralistic message – the meaning of which may now need to be deciphered by art historians, though some are clear enough. Many artists, and no doubt purchasers, certainly tried to have things both ways, enjoying the depiction of disorderly households or brothel scenes, while providing a moral interpretation – the works of Jan Steen, whose other profession was as an innkeeper, are an example. The balance between these elements is still debated by art historians today.[42]

 
Gerrit van Honthorst (1625), punning visually on the lute in this brothel scene

The titles given later to paintings often distinguish between "taverns" or "inns" and "brothels", but in practice these were very often the same establishments, as many taverns had rooms above or behind set aside for sexual purposes: "Inn in front; brothel behind" was a Dutch proverb.[43]

The Steen above is very clearly an exemplum, and though each of the individual components of it is realistically depicted, the overall scene is not a plausible depiction of a real moment; typically, of genre painting, it is a situation that is depicted, and satirized.[44]

The Renaissance tradition of recondite emblem books had, in the hands of the 17th-century Dutch – almost universally literate in the vernacular, but mostly without education in the classics – turned into the popularist and highly moralistic works of Jacob Cats, Roemer Visscher, and others, often based in popular proverbs. The illustrations to these are often quoted directly in paintings, and since the start of the 20th century art historians have attached proverbs, sayings and mottoes to a great number of genre works. Another popular source of meaning is visual puns using the great number of Dutch slang terms in the sexual area: the vagina could be represented by a lute (luit) or stocking (kous), and sex by a bird (vogelen), among many other options,[45] and purely visual symbols such as shoes, spouts, and jugs and flagons on their side.

 
Adriaen van Ostade, Peasants in an Interior (1661)

The same painters often painted works in a very different spirit of housewives or other women at rest in the home or at work – they massively outnumber similar treatments of men. In fact, working-class men going about their jobs are notably absent from Dutch Golden Age art, with landscapes populated by travellers and idlers but rarely tillers of the soil.[46] Despite the Dutch Republic being the most important nation in international trade in Europe, and the abundance of marine paintings, scenes of dock workers and other commercial activities are very rare.[47] This group of subjects was a Dutch invention, reflecting the cultural preoccupations of the age,[48] and was to be adopted by artists from other countries, especially France, in the two centuries following.

The tradition developed from the realism and detailed background activity of Early Netherlandish painting, which Hieronymus Bosch and Pieter Bruegel the Elder were among the first to turn into their principal subjects, also making use of proverbs. The Haarlem painters Willem Pieterszoon Buytewech, Frans Hals and Esaias van de Velde were important painters early in the period. Buytewech painted "merry companies" of finely dressed young people, with moralistic significance lurking in the detail.

 
Gabriel Metsu, The Hunter's Gift, c. 1660, a study in marital relations, with a visual pun.[49]

Van de Velde was also important as a landscapist, whose scenes included unglamorous figures very different from those in his genre paintings, which were typically set at garden parties in country houses. Hals was principally a portraitist, but also painted genre figures of a portrait size early in his career.[50]

A stay in Haarlem by the Flemish master of peasant tavern scenes Adriaen Brouwer, from 1625 or 1626, gave Adriaen van Ostade his lifelong subject, though he often took a more sentimental approach. Before Brouwer, peasants had normally been depicted outdoors; he usually shows them in a plain and dim interior, though van Ostade's sometimes occupy ostentatiously decrepit farmhouses of enormous size.[51]

Van Ostade was as likely to paint a single figure as a group, as were the Utrecht Caravaggisti in their genre works, and the single figure, or small groups of two or three became increasingly common, especially those including women and children. The most notable woman artist of the period, Judith Leyster (1609–1660), specialized in these, before her husband, Jan Miense Molenaer, prevailed on her to give up painting. The Leiden school of fijnschilder ("fine painters") were renowned for small and highly finished paintings, many of this type. Leading artists included Gerard Dou, Gabriel Metsu, Frans van Mieris the Elder, and later his son Willem van Mieris, Godfried Schalcken, and Adriaen van der Werff.

This later generation, whose work now seems over-refined compared to their predecessors, also painted portraits and histories, and were the most highly regarded and rewarded Dutch painters by the end of the period, whose works were sought after all over Europe.[52] Genre paintings reflected the increasing prosperity of Dutch society, and settings grew steadily more comfortable, opulent and carefully depicted as the century progressed. Artists not part of the Leiden group whose common subjects also were more intimate genre groups included Nicolaes Maes, Gerard ter Borch and Pieter de Hooch, whose interest in light in interior scenes was shared with Jan Vermeer, long a very obscure figure, but now the most highly regarded genre painter of all.

Landscapes and cityscapes edit

 
Esaias van de Velde, Winter Landscape (1623)

Landscape painting was a major genre in the 17th century. Flemish landscapes (particularly from Antwerp) of the 16th century first served as an example. These had been not particularly realistic, having been painted mostly in the studio, partly from imagination, and often still using the semi-aerial view from above typical of earlier Netherlandish landscape painting in the "world landscape" tradition of Joachim Patinir, Herri met de Bles and the early Pieter Bruegel the Elder. A more realistic Dutch landscape style developed, seen from ground level, often based on drawings made outdoors, with lower horizons which made it possible to emphasize the often impressive cloud formations that were (and are) so typical in the climate of the region, and which cast a particular light. Favourite subjects were the dunes along the western seacoast, rivers with their broad adjoining meadows where cattle grazed, often with the silhouette of a city in the distance. Winter landscapes with frozen canals and creeks also abounded. The sea was a favourite topic as well since the Low Countries depended on it for trade, battled with it for new land, and battled on it with competing nations.

Important early figures in the move to realism were Esaias van de Velde (1587–1630) and Hendrick Avercamp (1585–1634), both also mentioned above as genre painters – in Avercamp's case the same paintings deserve mention in each category. From the late 1620s the "tonal phase" of landscape painting started, as artists softened or blurred their outlines, and concentrated on an atmospheric effect, with great prominence given to the sky, and human figures usually either absent or small and distant. Compositions based on a diagonal across the picture space became popular, and water often featured. The leading artists were Jan van Goyen (1596–1656), Salomon van Ruysdael (1602–1670), Pieter de Molyn (1595–1661), and in marine painting Simon de Vlieger (1601–1653), with a host of minor figures – a recent study lists over 75 artists who worked in van Goyen's manner for at least a period, including Cuyp.[56]

 
Jacob van Ruisdael, The Windmill at Wijk (1670)
 
Aelbert Cuyp, River landscape with Riders (c. 1655); Cuyp specialized in golden evening light in Dutch settings

From the 1650s the "classical phase" began, retaining the atmospheric quality, but with more expressive compositions and stronger contrasts of light and colour. Compositions are often anchored by a single "heroic tree", windmill or tower, or ship in marine works.[57] The leading artist was Jacob van Ruisdael (1628–1682), who produced a great quantity and variety of work, using every typical Dutch subject except the Italianate landscape (below); instead, he produced "Nordic" landscapes of dark and dramatic mountain pine forests with rushing torrents and waterfalls.[58]

His pupil was Meindert Hobbema (1638–1709), best known for his atypical Avenue at Middelharnis (1689, London), a departure from his usual scenes of watermills and roads through woods. Two other artists with more personal styles, whose best work included larger pictures (up to a metre or more across), were Aelbert Cuyp (1620–1691) and Philips Koninck (1619–1688). Cuyp took golden Italian light and used it in evening scenes with a group of figures in the foreground and behind them a river and wide landscape. Koninck's best works are panoramic views, as from a hill, over wide flat farmlands, with a huge sky.

A different type of landscape, produced throughout the tonal and classical phases, was the romantic Italianate landscape, typically in more mountainous settings than are found in the Netherlands, with golden light, and sometimes picturesque Mediterranean staffage and ruins. Not all the artists who specialized in these had visited Italy. Jan Both (d. 1652), who had been to Rome and worked with Claude Lorrain, was a leading developer of the subgenre, which influenced the work of many painters of landscapes with Dutch settings, such as Aelbert Cuyp. Other artists who consistently worked in the style were Nicolaes Berchem (1620–1683) and Adam Pijnacker. Italianate landscapes were popular as prints, and more paintings by Berchem were reproduced in engravings during the period itself than those of any other artist.[59]

A number of other artists do not fit in any of these groups, above all Rembrandt, whose relatively few painted landscapes show various influences, including some from Hercules Seghers (c. 1589–c. 1638); his very rare large mountain valley landscapes were a very personal development of 16th-century styles.[60] Aert van der Neer (d. 1677) painted very small scenes of rivers at night or under ice and snow.

Landscapes with animals in the foreground were a distinct sub-type, and were painted by Cuyp, Paulus Potter (1625–1654), Albert Jansz. Klomp (1625-1688), Adriaen van de Velde (1636–1672) and Karel Dujardin (1626–1678, farm animals), with Philips Wouwerman painting horses and riders in various settings. The cow was a symbol of prosperity to the Dutch, hitherto overlooked in art, and apart from the horse by far the most commonly shown animal; goats were used to indicate Italy. Potter's The Young Bull is an enormous and famous portrait which Napoleon took to Paris (it later returned) though livestock analysts have noted from the depiction of the various parts of the anatomy that it appears to be a composite of studies of six different animals of widely different ages.

 
Pieter Jansz Saenredam, Assendelft Church, 1649, with the gravestone of his father in the foreground

Architecture also fascinated the Dutch, churches in particular. At the start of the period the main tradition was of fanciful palaces and city views of invented Northern Mannerist architecture, which Flemish painting continued to develop, and in Holland was represented by Dirck van Delen. A greater realism began to appear, and the exteriors and interiors of actual buildings were reproduced, though not always faithfully. During the century understanding of the proper rendering of perspective grew and were enthusiastically applied. Several artists specialized in church interiors.

Pieter Jansz Saenredam, whose father Jan Saenredam engraved sensuous nude Mannerist goddesses, painted unpeopled views of now whitewashed Gothic city churches. His emphasis on even light and geometry, with little depiction of surface textures, is brought out by comparing his works with those of Emanuel de Witte, who left in the people, uneven floors, contrasts of light and such clutter of church furniture as remained in Calvinist churches, all usually ignored by Saenredam. Gerard Houckgeest, followed by van Witte and Hendrick van Vliet, had supplemented the traditional view along a main axis of the church with diagonal views that added drama and interest.[61]

Gerrit Berckheyde specialized in lightly populated views of main city streets, squares, and major public buildings; Jan van der Heyden preferred more intimate scenes of quieter Amsterdam streets, often with trees and canals. These were real views, but he did not hesitate to adjust them for compositional effect.[62]

Maritime painting edit

 
Salomon van Ruisdael, typical View of Deventer Seen from the North-West (1657); an example of the "tonal phase"

The Dutch Republic relied on trade by sea for its exceptional wealth, had naval wars with Britain and other nations during the period, and was criss-crossed by rivers and canals. It is therefore no surprise that the genre of maritime painting was enormously popular, and taken to new heights in the period by Dutch artists; as with landscapes, the move from the artificial elevated view typical of earlier marine painting was a crucial step.[63] Pictures of sea battles told the stories of a Dutch navy at the peak of its glory, though today it is usually the more tranquil scenes that are highly estimated. Ships are normally at sea, and dock scenes surprisingly absent.[64]

More often than not, even small ships fly the Dutch tricolour, and many vessels can be identified as naval or one of the many other government ships. Many pictures included some land, with a beach or harbour viewpoint, or a view across an estuary. Other artists specialized in river scenes, from the small pictures of Salomon van Ruysdael with little boats and reed-banks to the large Italianate landscapes of Aelbert Cuyp, where the sun is usually setting over a wide river. The genre naturally shares much with landscape painting, and in developing the depiction of the sky the two went together; many landscape artists also painted beach and river scenes. Artists included Jan Porcellis, Simon de Vlieger, Jan van de Cappelle, Hendrick Dubbels and Abraham Storck. Willem van de Velde the Elder and his son are the leading masters of the later decades, tending, as at the beginning of the century, to make the ship the subject, whereas in tonal works of earlier decades the emphasis had been on the sea and the weather. They left for London in 1672, leaving the master of heavy seas, the German-born Ludolf Bakhuizen, as the leading artist.[65]

Still lifes edit

 
Pieter Claesz, Vanitas (1630)

Still lifes were a great opportunity to display skill in painting textures and surfaces in great detail and with realistic light effects. Food of all kinds laid out on a table, silver cutlery, intricate patterns and subtle folds in tablecloths and flowers all challenged painters. Dutch painters produced still lifes in great numbers, revealing the Dutch "love of domestic culture". The English term "derives from the Dutch word stilleven", which came into use about 1650.[66]

Several types of subject were recognised: banketje were "banquet pieces", ontbijtjes simpler "breakfast pieces".[67] Virtually all still lifes had a moralistic message, usually concerning the brevity of life – this is known as the vanitas theme – implicit even in the absence of an obvious symbol like a skull, or less obvious one such as a half-peeled lemon (like life, sweet in appearance but bitter to taste).[68] Flowers wilt and food decays, and silver is of no use to the soul. Nevertheless, the force of this message seems less powerful in the more elaborate pieces of the second half of the century.

 
Abraham van Beijeren (c. 1660); "ostentatious" still life.

Initially the objects shown were nearly always mundane. However, from the mid-century pronkstillevens ("ostentatious still lifes"), which depicted expensive and exotic objects and had been developed as a subgenre in the 1640s in Antwerp by Flemish artists such as Frans Snyders and Adriaen van Utrecht, became more popular.[69] The early realist, tonal and classical phases of landscape painting had counterparts in still life painting.[70] Willem Claeszoon Heda (1595–c. 1680) and Willem Kalf (1619–1693) led the change to the pronkstilleven, while Pieter Claesz (d. 1660) preferred to paint simpler "ontbijt" ("breakfast pieces"), or explicit vanitas pieces.

In all these painters, colours are often very muted, with browns dominating, especially in the middle of the century. This is less true of the works of Jan Davidsz de Heem (1606–1684), an important figure who spent much of his career based over the border in Antwerp. Here his displays began to sprawl sideways to form wide oblong pictures, unusual in the north, although Heda sometimes painted taller vertical compositions. Still life painters were especially prone to form dynasties, it seems there were many de Heems and Bosschaerts, Heda's son continued in his father's style, and Claesz was the father of Nicholaes Berchem.

 
Jacob Gillig, Freshwater Fish (1684)

Flower paintings formed a sub-group with its own specialists, and were occasionally the speciality of the few women artists, such as Maria van Oosterwyck and Rachel Ruysch.[71] The Dutch also led the world in botanical and other scientific drawings, prints and book illustrations. Despite the intense realism of individual flowers, paintings were composed from individual studies or even book illustrations, and blooms from very different seasons were routinely included in the same composition, and the same flowers reappear in different works, just as pieces of tableware do. There was also a fundamental unreality in that bouquets of flowers in vases were not in fact at all common in houses at the time – even the very rich displayed flowers one by one in delftware tulip-holders.[72]

The Dutch tradition was largely begun by Ambrosius Bosschaert (1573–1621), a Flemish-born flower painter who had settled in the north by the beginning of the period and founded a dynasty. His brother-in-law Balthasar van der Ast (d. 1657) pioneered still lifes of shells, as well as painting flowers. These early works were relatively brightly lit, with the bouquets of flowers arranged in a relatively simple way. From the mid-century arrangements that can fairly be called Baroque, usually against a dark background, became more popular, exemplified by the works of Willem van Aelst (1627–1683). Painters from Leiden, The Hague, and Amsterdam particularly excelled in the genre.

Dead game, and birds painted live but studied from the dead, were another subgenre, as were dead fish, a staple of the Dutch diet – Abraham van Beijeren did many of these.[73] The Dutch were less given to the Flemish style of combining large still life elements with other types of painting – they would have been considered prideful in portraits – and the Flemish habit of specialist painters collaborating on the different elements in the same work. But this sometimes did happen – Philips Wouwerman was occasionally used to add men and horses to turn a landscape into a hunting or skirmish scene, Berchem or Adriaen van de Velde to add people or farm animals.

Foreign lands edit

 
Frans Post, scene in Dutch Brazil; painted in 1662, some years after the colony was lost.

For Dutch artists, Karel van Mander's Schilderboeck was meant not only as a list of biographies, but also a source of advice for young artists. It quickly became a classic standard work for generations of young Dutch and Flemish artists in the 17th century. The book advised artists to travel and see the sights of Florence and Rome, and after 1604 many did so. However, it is noticeable that the most important Dutch artists in all fields, figures such as Rembrandt, Vermeer, Hals, Steen, Jacob van Ruisdael, and others, had not made the voyage.[13]

Many Dutch (and Flemish) painters worked abroad or exported their work; printmaking was also an important export market, by which Rembrandt became known across Europe. The Dutch Gift to Charles II of England was a diplomatic gift which included four contemporary Dutch paintings. English painting was heavily reliant on Dutch painters, with Sir Peter Lely followed by Sir Godfrey Kneller, developing the English portrait style established by the Flemish Anthony van Dyck before the English Civil War. The marine painters van der Velde, father and son, were among several artists who left Holland at the French invasion of 1672, which brought a collapse in the art market. They also moved to London, and the beginnings of English landscape painting were established by several less distinguished Dutch painters, such as Hendrick Danckerts.

The Bamboccianti were a colony of Dutch artists who introduced the genre scene to Italy. Jan Weenix and Melchior d'Hondecoeter specialized in game and birds, dead or alive, and were in demand for country house and shooting-lodge overdoors across Northern Europe.

Although the Dutch control of the northeast sugar-producing region of Dutch Brazil turned out to be brief (1630-54), Governor Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen invited Dutch artists to paint scenes which are valuable in showing the seventeenth-century landscape and peoples of the region.[74] The two most well-known of these artists were Frans Post, a landscapist, and a still life painter, Albert Eckhout, who produced ethnographic paintings of Brazil's population. These were originally displayed in the Great Hall of the Vrijburg Palace in Recife.[75] There was a market in Amsterdam for such paintings,[76] and Post continued to produce Brazilian scenes for years after his return to the Netherlands. The Dutch East Indies were covered much less well artistically.

Subsequent reputation edit

 
Philips Wouwerman, Travelers Awaiting a Ferry (1649); a landscape with Wouwerman's trademark highlight of a white horse

The enormous success of 17th-century Dutch painting overpowered the work of subsequent generations, and no Dutch painter of the 18th century—nor, arguably, a 19th-century one before Van Gogh—is well known outside the Netherlands. Already by the end of the period artists were complaining that buyers were more interested in dead than living artists.

If only because of the enormous quantities produced, Dutch Golden Age painting has always formed a significant part of collections of Old Master paintings, itself a term invented in the 18th century to describe Dutch Golden Age artists. Taking only Wouwerman paintings in old royal collections, there are more than 60 in Dresden and over 50 in the Hermitage.[77] But the reputation of the period has shown many changes and shifts of emphasis. One nearly constant factor has been admiration for Rembrandt, especially since the Romantic period. Other artists have shown drastic shifts in critical fortune and market price; at the end of the period some of the active Leiden fijnschilders had enormous reputations, but since the mid-19th century realist works in various genres have been far more appreciated.[78]

Vermeer was rescued from near-total obscurity in the 19th century, by which time several of his works had been re-attributed to others. However the fact that so many of his works were already in major collections, often attributed to other artists, demonstrates that the quality of individual paintings was recognised even if his collective oeuvre was unknown.[79] Other artists have continued to be rescued from the mass of little-known painters: the late and very simple still lifes of Adriaen Coorte in the 1950s,[80] and the landscapists Jacobus Mancaden and Frans Post earlier in the century.[81]

 
Gerard ter Borch, Paternal Admonition, or Brothel Scene (c. 1654; Amsterdam version)

Genre paintings were long popular, but little-regarded. In 1780 Horace Walpole disapproved that they "invite laughter to divert itself with the nastiest indelicacy of boors".[82] Sir Joshua Reynolds, the English leader of 18th-century academic art, made several revealing comments on Dutch art. He was impressed by the quality of Vermeer's Milkmaid (illustrated at the start of this article), and the liveliness of Hals' portraits, regretting he lacked the "patience" to finish them properly, and lamented that Steen had not been born in Italy and formed by the High Renaissance, so that his talent could have been put to better use.[83] By Reynolds' time the moralist aspect of genre painting was no longer understood, even in the Netherlands; the famous example is the so-called Paternal Admonition, as it was then known, by Gerard ter Borch. This was praised by Goethe and others for the delicacy of its depiction of a father reprimanding his daughter. In fact, in the view of most (but not all) modern scholars it is a proposition scene in a brothel – there are two versions (Berlin & Amsterdam) and it is unclear whether a "tell-tale coin" in the man's hand has been removed or overpainted in either.[84]

In the second half of the 18th century, the down-to-earth realism of Dutch painting was a "Whig taste" in England, and in France associated with Enlightenment rationalism and aspirations for political reform.[85] In the 19th century, with a near-universal respect for realism, and the final decline of the hierarchy of genres, contemporary painters began to borrow from genre painters both their realism and their use of objects for narrative purposes, and paint similar subjects themselves, with all the genres the Dutch had pioneered appearing on far larger canvases (still lifes excepted).

In landscape painting, the Italianate artists were the most influential and highly regarded in the 18th century, but John Constable was among those Romantics who denounced them for artificiality, preferring the tonal and classical artists.[59] In fact, both groups remained influential and popular in the 19th century.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In general histories 1702 is sometimes taken as the end of the Golden Age, a date which works reasonably well for painting. Slive, who avoids the term (see p. 296), divides his book into two parts: 1600–1675 (294 pages) and 1675–1800 (32 pages).
  2. ^ Confusingly, one particular genre of painting is called genre painting, the painting of some kind of everyday scenes with unidentified people. But, for example, still-life is also a genre in painting.
  3. ^ Fuchs, 104
  4. ^ Franits, 2-3
  5. ^ Lloyd, 15, citing Jonathan Israel. Perhaps only 1% survive today, and "only about 10% of these were of real quality".
  6. ^ Franits, 2
  7. ^ Jan Steen was an innkeeper, Aelbert Cuyp was one of many whose wealthy wives persuaded them to give up painting, although Karel Dujardin seems to have run away from his to continue his work. Conversely Jan van de Cappelle came from a very wealthy family, and Joachim Wtewael was a self-made flax tycoon. See their biographies in MacLaren. The fish artist Jacob Gillig also worked as a warder in the Utrecht prison, conveniently close to the fish market. 2018-08-13 at the Wayback Machine Bankrupts included: Rembrandt, Frans Hals, Jan de Bray, and many others.
  8. ^ Franits, 217 and ff. on 1672 and its effects.
  9. ^ Fuchs, 43; Franits, 2 calls this "oft-quoted" remark "undoubtedly exaggerated".
  10. ^ Fuchs, 104
  11. ^ Prak (2008), 151-153, or Prak (2003), 241
  12. ^ Prak (2008), 153
  13. ^ a b c Fuchs, 43
  14. ^ Franits' book is largely organized by city and by period; Slive by subject categories
  15. ^ Franits throughout, summarized on p. 260
  16. ^ Fuchs, 76
  17. ^ See Slive, 296-7 and elsewhere
  18. ^ Fuchs, 107
  19. ^ Fuchs, 62, R.H. Wilenski, Dutch Painting, "Prologue" pp. 27–43, 1945, Faber, London
  20. ^ Fuchs, 62-3
  21. ^ Slive, 13-14
  22. ^ Fuchs, 62-69
  23. ^ Franits, 65. Catholic 17th-century Dutch artists included Abraham Bloemaert and Gerard van Honthorst from Utrecht, and Jan Steen, Paulus Bor, Jacob van Velsen, plus Vermeer who probably converted at his marriage.[1] 2010-09-23 at the Wayback Machine Jacob Jordaens was among Flemish Protestant artists.
  24. ^ Slive, 22-4
  25. ^ Fuchs, 69-77
  26. ^ Fuchs, 77-78
  27. ^ Trip family tree 2021-01-09 at the Wayback Machine. Her grandparents' various portraits by Rembrandt are famous.
  28. ^ Ekkart, 17 n.1 (on p. 228).
  29. ^ Shawe-Taylor, 22-23, 32-33 on portraits, quotation from 33
  30. ^ Ekkart, 118
  31. ^ Ekkart, 130 and 114.
  32. ^ Ekkart (Marike de Winkel essay), 68-69
  33. ^ Ekkart (Marike de Winkel essay), 66-68
  34. ^ Ekkart (Marike de Winkel essay), 73
  35. ^ Ekkart (Marike de Winkel essay), 69-71
  36. ^ Ekkart (Marike de Winkel essay), 72-73
  37. ^ Another version at Apsley House, with a different composition, but using most of the same moralizing objects, is analysed by Franits, 206-9
  38. ^ Slive, 123
  39. ^ Fuchs, 42 and Slive, 123
  40. ^ Slive, 123
  41. ^ Franits, 1, mentioning costume in works by the Utrecht Caravagggisti, and architectural settings, as especially prone to abandon accurate depiction.
  42. ^ Franits, 4-6 summarizes the debate, for which Svetlana Alpers' The Art of Describing (1983) is an important work (though see Slive's terse comment on p. 344). See also Franits, 20-21 on paintings being understood differently by contemporary individuals, and his p.24
  43. ^ On Diderot's Art Criticism. Mira Friedman, p. 36 July 21, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Fuchs, 39-42, analyses two comparable scenes by Steen and Dou, and p. 46.
  45. ^ Fuchs, pp 54, 44, 45.
  46. ^ Slive, 191
  47. ^ Slive, 1
  48. ^ Explored at length by Schama in his Chapter 6. See also the analysis of The Milkmaid (Vermeer), claimed by different art historians for each tradition.
  49. ^ Franits, 180-182, though he strangely seems to discount the possibility that the couple are married. Married or not, the hunter clearly hopes for a return from his gift of (punning) birds, though the open shoe and gun on the floor, pointing in different directions, suggest he may be disappointed. Metsu used opposed dogs several times, and may have invented the motif, which was copied by Victorian artists. A statue of Cupid presides over the scene.
  50. ^ Franits, 24-27
  51. ^ Franits, 34-43. Presumably these are intended to imply houses abandoned by Catholic gentry who had fled south in the Eighty Years' War. His self-portrait shows him, equally implausibly, working in just such a setting.
  52. ^ Fuchs, 80
  53. ^ Franits, 164-6.
  54. ^ MacLaren, 227
  55. ^ Franits, 152-6. Schama, 455-460 discusses the general preoccupation with maidservants, "the most dangerous women of all" (p. 455). See also Franits, 118-119 and 166 on servants.
  56. ^ Slive, 189 – the study is by H.-U. Beck (1991)
  57. ^ Slive, 190 (quote), 195-202
  58. ^ Derived from works by Allart van Everdingen who, unlike Ruysdael, had visited Norway, in 1644. Slive, 203
  59. ^ a b Slive, 225
  60. ^ Rembrandt owned seven Seghers; after a recent fire only 11 are now thought to survive – how many of Rembrandt's remain is unclear.
  61. ^ Slive, 268-273
  62. ^ Slive, 273-6
  63. ^ Slive, 213-216
  64. ^ Franits, 1
  65. ^ Slive, 213-224
  66. ^ Slive, 277
  67. ^ MacLaren, 79
  68. ^ Slive, 279-281. Fuchs, 109
  69. ^ Pronkstilleven 2019-02-02 at the Wayback Machine in: Oxford Dictionary of Art Terms
  70. ^ Fuchs, 113-6
  71. ^ Tierney, Helen (1999). and only a few others, see Slive, 128, 320-321 and index, and Schama, 414. The outstanding woman artist of the age was Judith Leyster. ISBN 9780313296208. from the original on 2021-01-12. Retrieved 2016-02-20.
  72. ^ Fuchs, 111-112. Slive, 279-281, also covering unseasonal and recurring blooms.
  73. ^ Slive, 287-291
  74. ^ Rüdger Joppien. "The Dutch Vision of Brazil: Johan Maurits and His Artists", in Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen, 1604-1679: A Humanist Prince in Europe and Brazil, ed. Ernst van den Boogaart, et al. 297-376. The Hague: Johan Maurits van Nassau Stichting, 1979.
  75. ^ van Groesen, Amsterdam's Atlantic, pp. 171-72. With the Portuguese replacementr of the Dutch, Maurits gave the Vrijburg Palace paintings to Frederick III of Denmark
  76. ^ Michiel van Groesen, Amsterdam's Atlantic: Print Culture and the Making of Dutch Brazil. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 2017, pp. 150-51.
  77. ^ Slive, 212
  78. ^ See Reitlinger, 11-15, 23-4, and passim, and listings for individual artists
  79. ^ See Reitlinger, 483-4, and passim
  80. ^ Slive, 319
  81. ^ Slive, 191-2
  82. ^ "Advertisement" or Preface to Vol. 4 of the 2nd edition of Anecdotes of Painting in England, based on George Vertue's notebooks, page ix, 1782, J. Dodwell, London, Internet Archive
  83. ^ Slive, 144 (Vermeer), 41-2 (Hals), 173 (Steen)
  84. ^ Slive, 158-160 (coin quote), and Fuchs, 147-8, who uses the title Brothel Scene. Franits, 146-7, citing Alison Kettering, says there is "deliberate vagueness" as to the subject, and still uses the title Paternal Admonition.
  85. ^ Reitlinger, I, 11-15. Quote p.13

References edit

  • "Ekkart": Rudi Ekkart and Quentin Buvelot (eds), Dutch Portraits, The Age of Rembrandt and Frans Hals, Mauritshuis/National Gallery/Waanders Publishers, Zwolle, 2007, ISBN 978-1-85709-362-9
  • Franits, Wayne, Dutch Seventeenth-Century Genre Painting, Yale UP, 2004, ISBN 0-300-10237-2
  • Fuchs, RH, Dutch painting, Thames and Hudson, London, 1978, ISBN 0-500-20167-6
  • Ingamells, John, The Wallace Collection, Catalogue of Pictures, Vol IV, Dutch and Flemish, Wallace Collection, 1992, ISBN 0-900785-37-3
  • Lloyd, Christopher, Enchanting the Eye, Dutch Paintings of the Golden Age, Royal Collection Publications, 2004, ISBN 1-902163-90-7
  • MacLaren, Neil, The Dutch School, 1600–1800, Volume I, 1991, National Gallery Catalogues, National Gallery, London, ISBN 0-947645-99-3; the main source for biographical details
  • Prak, Maarten, (2003) "Guilds and the Development of the Art Market during the Dutch Golden Age." In: Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art, vol. 30, no. 3/4. (2003), pp. 236–251. Expanded version is Prak (2008)
  • Prak, Maarten, (2008), Painters, Guilds and the Art Market during the Dutch Golden Age, in Epstein, Stephen R. and Prak, Maarten (eds), Guilds, innovation, and the European economy, 1400–1800, Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 0-521-88717-8, ISBN 978-0-521-88717-5
  • Reitlinger, Gerald; The Economics of Taste, Vol I: The Rise and Fall of Picture Prices 1760–1960, Barrie and Rockliffe, London, 1961
  • Schama, Simon, The Embarrassment of Riches: An Interpretation of Dutch Culture in the Golden Age, 1987
  • Shawe-Taylor, Desmond and Scott, Jennifer, Bruegel to Rubens, Masters of Flemish Painting, Royal Collection Publications, London, 2008, ISBN 978-1-905686-00-1
  • Slive, Seymour, Dutch Painting, 1600–1800, Yale University Press, 1995, ISBN 0-300-07451-4

Further reading edit

  • Alpers, Svetlana. The Art of Describing: Dutch Art in the Seventeenth Century, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983, (review by Ernst Gombrich)
  • Franits, Wayne E., Dutch Seventeenth-Century Genre Painting : Its Stylistic and Thematic Evolution, 2018, Yale University Press
  • Grijzenhout, F., and Veen, Henk, The Golden Age of Dutch Painting in Historical Perspective, 1999, Cambridge University Press
  • Hochstrasser, Julie, Still Life and Trade in the Dutch Golden Age, 2007, Yale University Press
  • Liedtke, Walter A. (2001). Vermeer and the Delft School. Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-0-87099-973-4.
  • Alois Riegl, The Group Portraiture of Holland, reprint 2000, Getty Publications, ISBN 089236548X, 9780892365487, first published in German in 1902, fully available online
  • Dutch and Flemish paintings from the Hermitage. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1988. ISBN 978-0-87099-509-5. Fully available online.

External links edit

  • Painting in the Dutch Golden Age - National Gallery of Art
  • A Brief Overview of the Dutch Art Market in the 17th century

dutch, golden, painting, dutch, masters, redirects, here, cigar, dutch, masters, cigar, painting, dutch, golden, period, dutch, history, roughly, spanning, 17th, century, during, after, later, part, eighty, years, 1568, 1648, dutch, independence, johannes, ver. Dutch Masters redirects here For the cigar see Dutch Masters cigar Dutch Golden Age painting is the painting of the Dutch Golden Age a period in Dutch history roughly spanning the 17th century 1 during and after the later part of the Eighty Years War 1568 1648 for Dutch independence Johannes Vermeer The Milkmaid 1658 1661 The new Dutch Republic was the most prosperous nation in Europe and led European trade science and art The northern Netherlandish provinces that made up the new state had traditionally been less important artistic centres than cities in Flanders in the south The upheavals and large scale transfers of population of the war and the sharp break with the old monarchist and Catholic cultural traditions meant that Dutch art had to reinvent itself almost entirely a task in which it was very largely successful The painting of religious subjects declined very sharply but a large new market for all kinds of secular subjects grew up Although Dutch painting of the Golden Age is included in the general European period of Baroque painting and often shows many of its characteristics most lacks the idealization and love of splendour typical of much Baroque work including that of neighbouring Flanders Most work including that for which the period is best known reflects the traditions of detailed realism inherited from Early Netherlandish painting Frans Hals tronie with the later title Gypsy Girl 1628 30 Oil on wood 58 cm 52 cm 23 in 20 in The tronie includes elements of portraiture genre painting and sometimes history painting The Blinding of Samson 1636 which Rembrandt gave to HuyghensA distinctive feature of the period is the proliferation of distinct genres of paintings 2 with the majority of artists producing the bulk of their work within one of these The full development of this specialization is seen from the late 1620s and the period from then until the French invasion of 1672 is the core of Golden Age painting Artists would spend most of their careers painting only portraits genre scenes landscapes seascapes and ships or still lifes and often a particular sub type within these categories Many of these types of subjects were new in Western painting and the way the Dutch painted them in this period was decisive for their future development Contents 1 Types of painting 2 The art world 3 History painting 4 Portraits 5 Scenes of everyday life 6 Landscapes and cityscapes 7 Maritime painting 8 Still lifes 9 Foreign lands 10 Subsequent reputation 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksTypes of painting edit nbsp Paulus Potter The Young Bull 1647 3 4 metres wide An unusually monumental animal painting that challenges the hierarchy of genres A distinctive feature of the period compared to earlier European painting was the small amount of religious painting Dutch Calvinism forbade religious painting in churches and though biblical subjects were acceptable in private homes relatively few were produced The other traditional classes of history and portrait painting were present but the period is more notable for a huge variety of other genres sub divided into numerous specialized categories such as scenes of peasant life landscapes townscapes landscapes with animals maritime paintings flower paintings and still lifes of various types The development of many of these types of painting was decisively influenced by 17th century Dutch artists The widely held theory of the hierarchy of genres in painting whereby some types were regarded as more prestigious than others led many painters to want to produce history painting However this was the hardest to sell as even Rembrandt found Many were forced to produce portraits or genre scenes which sold much more easily In descending order of status the categories in the hierarchy were History painting including allegories and popular religious subjects Portrait painting including the tronie Genre painting or scenes of everyday life Landscape including seascapes battlescenes cityscapes and ruins landscapists were the common footmen in the Army of Art according to Samuel van Hoogstraten 3 Still lifeThe Dutch concentrated heavily on the lower categories but by no means rejected the concept of the hierarchy 4 Most paintings were relatively small the only common type of really large paintings were group portraits Painting directly onto walls hardly existed when a wall space in a public building needed decorating fitted framed canvas was normally used For the extra precision possible on a hard surface many painters continued to use wooden panels sometime after the rest of Western Europe had abandoned them some used copper plates usually recycling plates from printmaking In turn the number of surviving Golden Age paintings was reduced by them being overpainted with new works by artists throughout the 18th and 19th century poor ones were usually cheaper than a new canvas stretcher and frame There was very little Dutch sculpture during the period it is mostly found in tomb monuments and attached to public buildings and small sculptures for houses are a noticeable gap their place taken by silverware and ceramics Painted delftware tiles were very cheap and common if rarely of really high quality but silver especially in the auricular style led Europe With this exception the best artistic efforts were concentrated on painting and printmaking The art world edit nbsp Dirck Hals genre scene of Gentlemen Smoking and Playing Backgammon in a Tavern Note see also here Foreigners remarked on the enormous quantities of art produced and the large fairs where many paintings were sold it has been roughly estimated that over 1 3 million Dutch pictures were painted in the 20 years after 1640 alone 5 The volume of production meant that prices were fairly low except for the best known artists as in most subsequent periods there was a steep price gradient for more fashionable artists 6 Those without a strong contemporary reputation or who had fallen out of fashion including many now considered among the greatest of the period such as Vermeer Frans Hals and Rembrandt in his last years had considerable problems earning a living and died poor many artists had other jobs or abandoned art entirely 7 In particular the French invasion of 1672 the Rampjaar or year of disaster brought a severe depression to the art market which never quite returned to earlier heights 8 The distribution of pictures was very wide yea many tymes blacksmithes cobblers etts will have some picture or other by their Forge and in their stalle Such is the generall Notion enclination and delight that these Countrie Native have to Painting reported an English traveller in 1640 9 There were for virtually the first time many professional art dealers several also significant artists like Vermeer and his father Jan van Goyen and Willem Kalf Rembrandt s dealer Hendrick van Uylenburgh and his son Gerrit were among the most important Landscapes were the easiest uncommissioned works to sell and their painters were the common footmen in the Army of Art according to Samuel van Hoogstraten 10 nbsp The Haarlem Painter s Guild in 1675 by Jan de Bray whose self portrait is the second from the leftThe technical quality of Dutch artists was generally high still mostly following the old medieval system of training by apprenticeship with a master Typically workshops were smaller than in Flanders or Italy with only one or two apprentices at a time the number often being restricted by guild regulations The turmoil of the early years of the Republic with displaced artists from the south moving north and the loss of traditional markets in the court and church led to a resurgence of artists guilds often still called the Guild of Saint Luke In many cases these involved the artists extricating themselves from medieval groupings where they shared a guild with several other trades such as housepainting Several new guilds were established in the period Amsterdam in 1579 Haarlem in 1590 and Gouda Rotterdam Utrecht and Delft between 1609 and 1611 11 The Leiden authorities distrusted guilds and did not allow one until 1648 12 Later in the century it began to become clear to all involved that the old idea of a guild controlling both training and sales no longer worked well and gradually the guilds were replaced with academies often only concerned with the training of artists The Hague with the court was an early example where artists split into two groups in 1656 with the founding of the Confrerie Pictura With the obvious exception of portraits many more Dutch paintings were done speculatively without a specific commission than was then the case in other countries one of many ways in which the Dutch art market showed the future 13 nbsp Aert de Gelder Self portrait as Zeuxis 1685 There were many dynasties of artists and many married the daughters of their masters or other artists Many artists came from well off families who paid fees for their apprenticeships and they often married into property Rembrandt and Jan Steen were both enrolled at the University of Leiden for a while Several cities had distinct styles and specialities by subject but Amsterdam was the largest artistic centre because of its great wealth 14 Cities such as Haarlem and Utrecht were more important in the first half of the century with Leiden and other cities emerging after 1648 and above all Amsterdam which increasingly drew to it artists from the rest of the Netherlands as well as Flanders and Germany 15 Dutch artists were strikingly less concerned about artistic theory than those of many nations and less given to discussing their art it appears that there was also much less interest in artistic theory in general intellectual circles and among the wider public than was by then common in Italy 16 As nearly all commissions and sales were private and between bourgeois individuals whose accounts have not been preserved these are also less well documented than elsewhere But Dutch art was a source of national pride and the major biographers are crucial sources of information These are Karel van Mander Het Schilderboeck 1604 who essentially covers the previous century and Arnold Houbraken De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen The Great Theatre of Dutch Painters 1718 21 Both followed and indeed exceeded Vasari in including a great number of short lives of artists over 500 in Houbraken s case and both are considered generally accurate on factual matters The German artist Joachim von Sandrart 1606 1688 had worked for periods in Holland and his Deutsche Akademie in the same format covers many Dutch artists he knew Houbraken s master and Rembrandt s pupil was Samuel van Hoogstraten 1627 1678 whose Zichtbare wereld and Inleyding tot de Hooge Schoole der Schilderkonst 1678 contain more critical than biographical information and are among the most important treatises on painting of the period Like other Dutch works on the theory of art they expound many commonplaces of Renaissance theory and do not entirely reflect contemporary Dutch art still often concentrating on history painting 17 History painting edit nbsp Jacob van Loo Danae compare Rembrandt s treatment This category comprises not only paintings that depicted historical events of the past but also paintings that showed biblical mythological literary and allegorical scenes Recent historical events essentially fell out of the category and were treated in a realist fashion as the appropriate combination of portraits with marine townscape or landscape subjects 18 Large dramatic historical or Biblical scenes were produced less frequently than in other countries as there was no local market for church art and few large aristocratic Baroque houses to fill More than that the Protestant population of major cities had been exposed to some remarkably hypocritical uses of Mannerist allegory in unsuccessful Habsburg propaganda during the Dutch Revolt which had produced a strong reaction towards realism and a distrust of grandiose visual rhetoric 19 History painting was now a minority art although to an extent this was redressed by a relatively keen interest in print versions of history subjects 20 More than in other types of painting Dutch history painters continued to be influenced by Italian painting Prints and copies of Italian masterpieces circulated and suggested certain compositional schemes The growing Dutch skill in the depiction of light was brought to bear on styles derived from Italy notably that of Caravaggio Some Dutch painters also travelled to Italy though this was less common than with their Flemish contemporaries as can be seen from the membership of the Bentvueghels club in Rome 13 nbsp Utrecht Caravaggism Dirck van Baburen Christ crowned with thorns 1623 for a convent in Utrecht not a market available in most of Holland In the early part of the century many Northern Mannerist artists with styles formed in the previous century continued to work until the 1630s in the cases of Abraham Bloemaert and Joachim Wtewael 21 Many history paintings were small in scale with the German painter based in Rome Adam Elsheimer as much an influence as Caravaggio both died in 1610 on Dutch painters like Pieter Lastman Rembrandt s master and Jan and Jacob Pynas Compared to Baroque history painting from other countries they shared the Dutch emphasis on realism and narrative directness and are sometimes known as the Pre Rembrandtists as Rembrandt s early paintings were in this style 22 Utrecht Caravaggism describes a group of artists who produced both history painting and generally large genre scenes in an Italian influenced style often making heavy use of chiaroscuro Utrecht before the revolt the most important city in the new Dutch territory was an unusual Dutch city still about 40 Catholic in the mid century even more among the elite groups who included many rural nobility and gentry with town houses there 23 The leading artists were Hendrick ter Brugghen Gerard van Honthorst and Dirck van Baburen and the school was active about 1630 although van Honthorst continued until the 1650s as a successful court painter to the English Dutch and Danish courts in a more classical style 24 Rembrandt began as a history painter before finding financial success as a portraitist and he never relinquished his ambitions in this area A great number of his etchings are of narrative religious scenes and the story of his last history commission The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis 1661 illustrates both his commitment to the form and the difficulties he had in finding an audience 25 Several artists many his pupils attempted with some success to continue his very personal style Govaert Flinck was the most successful Gerard de Lairesse 1640 1711 was another of these before falling under heavy influence from French classicism and becoming its leading Dutch proponent as both artist and theoretician 26 Nudity was effectively the preserve of the history painter although many portraitists dressed up their occasional nudes nearly always female with a classical title as Rembrandt did For all their uninhibited suggestiveness genre painters rarely revealed more than a generous cleavage or stretch of thigh usually when painting prostitutes or Italian peasants Portraits edit nbsp Bartholomeus van der Helst Sophia Trip 1645 a member of one of the wealthiest families in Holland 27 Portrait painting thrived in the Netherlands in the 17th century as there was a large mercantile class who were far more ready to commission portraits than their equivalents in other countries a summary of various estimates of total production arrives at between 750 000 and 1 100 000 portraits 28 Rembrandt enjoyed his greatest period of financial success as a young Amsterdam portraitist but like other artists grew rather bored with painting commissioned portraits of burghers artists travel along this road without delight according to van Mander 29 While Dutch portrait painting avoids the swagger and excessive rhetoric of the aristocratic Baroque portraiture current in the rest of 17th century Europe the sombre clothing of male and in many cases female sitters and the Calvinist feeling that the inclusion of props possessions or views of land in the background would show the sin of pride leads to an undeniable sameness in many Dutch portraits for all their technical quality Even a standing pose is usually avoided as a full length might also show pride Poses are undemonstrative especially for women though children may be allowed more freedom The classic moment for having a portrait painted was upon marriage when the new husband and wife more often than not occupied separate frames in a pair of paintings Rembrandt s later portraits compel by force of characterization and sometimes a narrative element but even his early portraits can be dispiriting en masse as in the roomful of starter Rembrandts donated to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York nbsp Frans Hals Willem Heythuijsen 1634 47 cm 37 cm 19 in 15 in nbsp Jan Mijtens family portrait 1652 with the boys in picturesque dressThe other great portraitist of the period is Frans Hals whose famously lively brushwork and ability to show sitters looking relaxed and cheerful adds excitement to even the most unpromising subjects The extremely nonchalant pose of his portrait of Willem Heythuijsen is exceptional no other portrait from this period is so informal 30 The sitter was a wealthy textile merchant who had already commissioned Hals only individual life sized full length portrait ten years before In this much smaller work for a private chamber he wears riding clothes 31 Jan de Bray encouraged his sitters to pose costumed as figures from classical history but many of his works are of his own family Thomas de Keyser Bartholomeus van der Helst Ferdinand Bol and others including many mentioned below as history or genre painters did their best to enliven more conventional works Portraiture less affected by fashion than other types of painting remained the safe fallback for Dutch artists From what little we know of the studio procedures of artists it seems that as elsewhere in Europe the face was probably drawn and perhaps painted at an initial sitting or two The typical number of further sittings is unclear between zero for a Rembrandt full length and 50 appear documented The clothes were left at the studio and might well be painted by assistants or a brought in specialist master although or because they were regarded as a very important part of the painting 32 Married and never married women can be distinguished by their dress highlighting how few single women were painted except in family groups 33 As elsewhere the accuracy of the clothes shown is variable striped and patterned clothes were worn but artists rarely show them understandably avoiding the extra work 34 Lace and ruff collars were unavoidable and presented a formidable challenge to painters intent on realism Rembrandt evolved a more effective way of painting patterned lace laying in broad white stokes and then painting lightly in black to show the pattern Another way of doing this was to paint in white over a black layer and scratch off the white with the end of the brush to show the pattern 35 At the end of the century there was a fashion for showing sitters in a semi fancy dress begun in England by van Dyck in the 1630s known as picturesque or Roman dress 36 Aristocratic and militia sitters allowed themselves more freedom in bright dress and expansive settings than burghers and religious affiliations probably affected many depictions By the end of the century aristocratic or French values were spreading among the burghers and depictions were allowed more freedom and display A distinctive type of painting combining elements of the portrait history and genre painting was the tronie This was usually a half length of a single figure which concentrated on capturing an unusual mood or expression The actual identity of the model was not supposed to be important but they might represent a historical figure and be in exotic or historic costume Jan Lievens and Rembrandt many of whose self portraits are also tronies especially his etched ones were among those who developed the genre Family portraits tended as in Flanders to be set outdoors in gardens but without an extensive view as later in England and to be relatively informal in dress and mood Group portraits largely a Dutch invention were popular among the large numbers of civic associations that were a notable part of Dutch life such as the officers of a city s schutterij or militia guards boards of trustees and regents of guilds and charitable foundations and the like Especially in the first half of the century portraits were very formal and stiff in composition Groups were often seated around a table each person looking at the viewer Much attention was paid to fine details in clothing and where applicable to furniture and other signs of a person s position in society Later in the century groups became livelier and colours brighter Rembrandt s Syndics of the Drapers Guild is a subtle treatment of a group round a table nbsp The Meagre Company an Amsterdam militia group portrait or schutterstuk by Frans Hals and Pieter Codde 1633 37 nbsp Bartholomeus van der Helst Banquet of the Amsterdam Civic Guard in Celebration of the Peace of Munster 1648 5 47 metres wideScientists often posed with instruments and objects of their study around them Physicians sometimes posed together around a cadaver a so called Anatomical Lesson the most famous one being Rembrandt s Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp 1632 Mauritshuis The Hague Boards of trustees in their regentenstuk portraits preferred an image of austerity and humility posing in dark clothing which by its refinement testified to their prominent standing in society often seated around a table with solemn expressions on their faces Most militia group portraits were commissioned in Haarlem and Amsterdam and were much more flamboyant and relaxed or even boisterous than other types of portraits as well as much larger Early examples showed them dining but later groups showed most figures standing for a more dynamic composition Rembrandt s famous The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq better known as the Night Watch 1642 was an ambitious and not entirely successful attempt to show a group in action setting out for a patrol or parade also innovative in avoiding the typical very wide format of such works The cost of group portraits was usually shared by the subjects often not equally The amount paid might determine each person s place in the picture either head to toe in full regalia in the foreground or face only in the back of the group Sometimes all group members paid an equal sum which was likely to lead to quarrels when some members gained a more prominent place in the picture than others In Amsterdam most of these paintings would ultimately end up in the possession of the city council and many are now on display in the Amsterdams Historisch Museum there are no significant examples outside the Netherlands Scenes of everyday life edit nbsp A typical Jan Steen picture c 1663 while the housewife sleeps the household play 37 Scenes of everyday life now called genre paintings prominently feature figures to whom no specific identity can be attached they are not portraits or intended as historical figures but rather snapshots of quotidian life Together with landscape painting the development and enormous popularity of genre painting is the most distinctive feature of Dutch painting in this period although in this case they were also very popular in Flemish painting Many are single figures such as Vermeer s The Milkmaid others may show large groups at some social occasion or crowds Seventeenth century Holland produced more and better artists dedicated to genre painting with and without messages than any other nation 38 There were a large number of sub types within the genre single figures peasant families tavern scenes merry company parties women at work about the house scenes of village or town festivities though these were still more common in Flemish painting market scenes barracks scenes scenes with horses or farm animals in snow by moonlight and many more In fact most of these had specific terms in Dutch but there was no overall Dutch term equivalent to genre painting until the late 18th century the English often called them drolleries 39 Some artists worked mostly within one of these sub types especially after about 1625 40 Over the course of the century genre paintings tended to reduce in size Though genre paintings provide many insights into the daily life of 17th century citizens of all classes their accuracy cannot always be taken for granted 41 Typically they show what art historians term a reality effect rather than an actual realist depiction the degree to which this is the case varies between artists Many paintings which seem only to depict everyday scenes actually illustrated Dutch proverbs and sayings or conveyed a moralistic message the meaning of which may now need to be deciphered by art historians though some are clear enough Many artists and no doubt purchasers certainly tried to have things both ways enjoying the depiction of disorderly households or brothel scenes while providing a moral interpretation the works of Jan Steen whose other profession was as an innkeeper are an example The balance between these elements is still debated by art historians today 42 nbsp Gerrit van Honthorst 1625 punning visually on the lute in this brothel sceneThe titles given later to paintings often distinguish between taverns or inns and brothels but in practice these were very often the same establishments as many taverns had rooms above or behind set aside for sexual purposes Inn in front brothel behind was a Dutch proverb 43 The Steen above is very clearly an exemplum and though each of the individual components of it is realistically depicted the overall scene is not a plausible depiction of a real moment typically of genre painting it is a situation that is depicted and satirized 44 The Renaissance tradition of recondite emblem books had in the hands of the 17th century Dutch almost universally literate in the vernacular but mostly without education in the classics turned into the popularist and highly moralistic works of Jacob Cats Roemer Visscher and others often based in popular proverbs The illustrations to these are often quoted directly in paintings and since the start of the 20th century art historians have attached proverbs sayings and mottoes to a great number of genre works Another popular source of meaning is visual puns using the great number of Dutch slang terms in the sexual area the vagina could be represented by a lute luit or stocking kous and sex by a bird vogelen among many other options 45 and purely visual symbols such as shoes spouts and jugs and flagons on their side nbsp Adriaen van Ostade Peasants in an Interior 1661 The same painters often painted works in a very different spirit of housewives or other women at rest in the home or at work they massively outnumber similar treatments of men In fact working class men going about their jobs are notably absent from Dutch Golden Age art with landscapes populated by travellers and idlers but rarely tillers of the soil 46 Despite the Dutch Republic being the most important nation in international trade in Europe and the abundance of marine paintings scenes of dock workers and other commercial activities are very rare 47 This group of subjects was a Dutch invention reflecting the cultural preoccupations of the age 48 and was to be adopted by artists from other countries especially France in the two centuries following The tradition developed from the realism and detailed background activity of Early Netherlandish painting which Hieronymus Bosch and Pieter Bruegel the Elder were among the first to turn into their principal subjects also making use of proverbs The Haarlem painters Willem Pieterszoon Buytewech Frans Hals and Esaias van de Velde were important painters early in the period Buytewech painted merry companies of finely dressed young people with moralistic significance lurking in the detail nbsp Gabriel Metsu The Hunter s Gift c 1660 a study in marital relations with a visual pun 49 Van de Velde was also important as a landscapist whose scenes included unglamorous figures very different from those in his genre paintings which were typically set at garden parties in country houses Hals was principally a portraitist but also painted genre figures of a portrait size early in his career 50 A stay in Haarlem by the Flemish master of peasant tavern scenes Adriaen Brouwer from 1625 or 1626 gave Adriaen van Ostade his lifelong subject though he often took a more sentimental approach Before Brouwer peasants had normally been depicted outdoors he usually shows them in a plain and dim interior though van Ostade s sometimes occupy ostentatiously decrepit farmhouses of enormous size 51 Van Ostade was as likely to paint a single figure as a group as were the Utrecht Caravaggisti in their genre works and the single figure or small groups of two or three became increasingly common especially those including women and children The most notable woman artist of the period Judith Leyster 1609 1660 specialized in these before her husband Jan Miense Molenaer prevailed on her to give up painting The Leiden school of fijnschilder fine painters were renowned for small and highly finished paintings many of this type Leading artists included Gerard Dou Gabriel Metsu Frans van Mieris the Elder and later his son Willem van Mieris Godfried Schalcken and Adriaen van der Werff This later generation whose work now seems over refined compared to their predecessors also painted portraits and histories and were the most highly regarded and rewarded Dutch painters by the end of the period whose works were sought after all over Europe 52 Genre paintings reflected the increasing prosperity of Dutch society and settings grew steadily more comfortable opulent and carefully depicted as the century progressed Artists not part of the Leiden group whose common subjects also were more intimate genre groups included Nicolaes Maes Gerard ter Borch and Pieter de Hooch whose interest in light in interior scenes was shared with Jan Vermeer long a very obscure figure but now the most highly regarded genre painter of all nbsp The mute Hendrick Avercamp painted almost exclusively winter scenes of crowds seen from some distance nbsp Pieter de Hooch Courtyard of a House in Delft 1658 a study in domestic virtue texture and spatial complexity The woman is a servant 53 nbsp Judith Leyster A Boy and a Girl with a Cat and an Eel various references to proverbs or emblems have been suggested 54 nbsp Nicolaes Maes The idle servant housemaid troubles were the subject of several of Maes works 55 Landscapes and cityscapes edit nbsp Esaias van de Velde Winter Landscape 1623 Landscape painting was a major genre in the 17th century Flemish landscapes particularly from Antwerp of the 16th century first served as an example These had been not particularly realistic having been painted mostly in the studio partly from imagination and often still using the semi aerial view from above typical of earlier Netherlandish landscape painting in the world landscape tradition of Joachim Patinir Herri met de Bles and the early Pieter Bruegel the Elder A more realistic Dutch landscape style developed seen from ground level often based on drawings made outdoors with lower horizons which made it possible to emphasize the often impressive cloud formations that were and are so typical in the climate of the region and which cast a particular light Favourite subjects were the dunes along the western seacoast rivers with their broad adjoining meadows where cattle grazed often with the silhouette of a city in the distance Winter landscapes with frozen canals and creeks also abounded The sea was a favourite topic as well since the Low Countries depended on it for trade battled with it for new land and battled on it with competing nations Important early figures in the move to realism were Esaias van de Velde 1587 1630 and Hendrick Avercamp 1585 1634 both also mentioned above as genre painters in Avercamp s case the same paintings deserve mention in each category From the late 1620s the tonal phase of landscape painting started as artists softened or blurred their outlines and concentrated on an atmospheric effect with great prominence given to the sky and human figures usually either absent or small and distant Compositions based on a diagonal across the picture space became popular and water often featured The leading artists were Jan van Goyen 1596 1656 Salomon van Ruysdael 1602 1670 Pieter de Molyn 1595 1661 and in marine painting Simon de Vlieger 1601 1653 with a host of minor figures a recent study lists over 75 artists who worked in van Goyen s manner for at least a period including Cuyp 56 nbsp Jacob van Ruisdael The Windmill at Wijk 1670 nbsp Aelbert Cuyp River landscape with Riders c 1655 Cuyp specialized in golden evening light in Dutch settingsFrom the 1650s the classical phase began retaining the atmospheric quality but with more expressive compositions and stronger contrasts of light and colour Compositions are often anchored by a single heroic tree windmill or tower or ship in marine works 57 The leading artist was Jacob van Ruisdael 1628 1682 who produced a great quantity and variety of work using every typical Dutch subject except the Italianate landscape below instead he produced Nordic landscapes of dark and dramatic mountain pine forests with rushing torrents and waterfalls 58 His pupil was Meindert Hobbema 1638 1709 best known for his atypical Avenue at Middelharnis 1689 London a departure from his usual scenes of watermills and roads through woods Two other artists with more personal styles whose best work included larger pictures up to a metre or more across were Aelbert Cuyp 1620 1691 and Philips Koninck 1619 1688 Cuyp took golden Italian light and used it in evening scenes with a group of figures in the foreground and behind them a river and wide landscape Koninck s best works are panoramic views as from a hill over wide flat farmlands with a huge sky A different type of landscape produced throughout the tonal and classical phases was the romantic Italianate landscape typically in more mountainous settings than are found in the Netherlands with golden light and sometimes picturesque Mediterranean staffage and ruins Not all the artists who specialized in these had visited Italy Jan Both d 1652 who had been to Rome and worked with Claude Lorrain was a leading developer of the subgenre which influenced the work of many painters of landscapes with Dutch settings such as Aelbert Cuyp Other artists who consistently worked in the style were Nicolaes Berchem 1620 1683 and Adam Pijnacker Italianate landscapes were popular as prints and more paintings by Berchem were reproduced in engravings during the period itself than those of any other artist 59 A number of other artists do not fit in any of these groups above all Rembrandt whose relatively few painted landscapes show various influences including some from Hercules Seghers c 1589 c 1638 his very rare large mountain valley landscapes were a very personal development of 16th century styles 60 Aert van der Neer d 1677 painted very small scenes of rivers at night or under ice and snow Landscapes with animals in the foreground were a distinct sub type and were painted by Cuyp Paulus Potter 1625 1654 Albert Jansz Klomp 1625 1688 Adriaen van de Velde 1636 1672 and Karel Dujardin 1626 1678 farm animals with Philips Wouwerman painting horses and riders in various settings The cow was a symbol of prosperity to the Dutch hitherto overlooked in art and apart from the horse by far the most commonly shown animal goats were used to indicate Italy Potter s The Young Bull is an enormous and famous portrait which Napoleon took to Paris it later returned though livestock analysts have noted from the depiction of the various parts of the anatomy that it appears to be a composite of studies of six different animals of widely different ages nbsp Pieter Jansz Saenredam Assendelft Church 1649 with the gravestone of his father in the foregroundArchitecture also fascinated the Dutch churches in particular At the start of the period the main tradition was of fanciful palaces and city views of invented Northern Mannerist architecture which Flemish painting continued to develop and in Holland was represented by Dirck van Delen A greater realism began to appear and the exteriors and interiors of actual buildings were reproduced though not always faithfully During the century understanding of the proper rendering of perspective grew and were enthusiastically applied Several artists specialized in church interiors Pieter Jansz Saenredam whose father Jan Saenredam engraved sensuous nude Mannerist goddesses painted unpeopled views of now whitewashed Gothic city churches His emphasis on even light and geometry with little depiction of surface textures is brought out by comparing his works with those of Emanuel de Witte who left in the people uneven floors contrasts of light and such clutter of church furniture as remained in Calvinist churches all usually ignored by Saenredam Gerard Houckgeest followed by van Witte and Hendrick van Vliet had supplemented the traditional view along a main axis of the church with diagonal views that added drama and interest 61 Gerrit Berckheyde specialized in lightly populated views of main city streets squares and major public buildings Jan van der Heyden preferred more intimate scenes of quieter Amsterdam streets often with trees and canals These were real views but he did not hesitate to adjust them for compositional effect 62 nbsp Jacob van Ruisdael View of Haarlem Ruisdael is a central figure with more varied subjects than many landscapists nbsp Jan Both c 1650 Italian landscape of the type Both began to paint after his return from Rome nbsp Allaert van Everdingen c 1660 Nordic landscape of the type Van Eeverdingen began to paint after his return from Norway and Sweden nbsp Jan van Goyen Dune landscape an example of the tonal style nbsp The Great Market in Haarlem 1696 by Gerrit Berckheyde Maritime painting edit nbsp Salomon van Ruisdael typical View of Deventer Seen from the North West 1657 an example of the tonal phase The Dutch Republic relied on trade by sea for its exceptional wealth had naval wars with Britain and other nations during the period and was criss crossed by rivers and canals It is therefore no surprise that the genre of maritime painting was enormously popular and taken to new heights in the period by Dutch artists as with landscapes the move from the artificial elevated view typical of earlier marine painting was a crucial step 63 Pictures of sea battles told the stories of a Dutch navy at the peak of its glory though today it is usually the more tranquil scenes that are highly estimated Ships are normally at sea and dock scenes surprisingly absent 64 More often than not even small ships fly the Dutch tricolour and many vessels can be identified as naval or one of the many other government ships Many pictures included some land with a beach or harbour viewpoint or a view across an estuary Other artists specialized in river scenes from the small pictures of Salomon van Ruysdael with little boats and reed banks to the large Italianate landscapes of Aelbert Cuyp where the sun is usually setting over a wide river The genre naturally shares much with landscape painting and in developing the depiction of the sky the two went together many landscape artists also painted beach and river scenes Artists included Jan Porcellis Simon de Vlieger Jan van de Cappelle Hendrick Dubbels and Abraham Storck Willem van de Velde the Elder and his son are the leading masters of the later decades tending as at the beginning of the century to make the ship the subject whereas in tonal works of earlier decades the emphasis had been on the sea and the weather They left for London in 1672 leaving the master of heavy seas the German born Ludolf Bakhuizen as the leading artist 65 Still lifes edit nbsp Pieter Claesz Vanitas 1630 Still lifes were a great opportunity to display skill in painting textures and surfaces in great detail and with realistic light effects Food of all kinds laid out on a table silver cutlery intricate patterns and subtle folds in tablecloths and flowers all challenged painters Dutch painters produced still lifes in great numbers revealing the Dutch love of domestic culture The English term derives from the Dutch word stilleven which came into use about 1650 66 Several types of subject were recognised banketje were banquet pieces ontbijtjes simpler breakfast pieces 67 Virtually all still lifes had a moralistic message usually concerning the brevity of life this is known as the vanitas theme implicit even in the absence of an obvious symbol like a skull or less obvious one such as a half peeled lemon like life sweet in appearance but bitter to taste 68 Flowers wilt and food decays and silver is of no use to the soul Nevertheless the force of this message seems less powerful in the more elaborate pieces of the second half of the century nbsp Abraham van Beijeren c 1660 ostentatious still life Initially the objects shown were nearly always mundane However from the mid century pronkstillevens ostentatious still lifes which depicted expensive and exotic objects and had been developed as a subgenre in the 1640s in Antwerp by Flemish artists such as Frans Snyders and Adriaen van Utrecht became more popular 69 The early realist tonal and classical phases of landscape painting had counterparts in still life painting 70 Willem Claeszoon Heda 1595 c 1680 and Willem Kalf 1619 1693 led the change to the pronkstilleven while Pieter Claesz d 1660 preferred to paint simpler ontbijt breakfast pieces or explicit vanitas pieces In all these painters colours are often very muted with browns dominating especially in the middle of the century This is less true of the works of Jan Davidsz de Heem 1606 1684 an important figure who spent much of his career based over the border in Antwerp Here his displays began to sprawl sideways to form wide oblong pictures unusual in the north although Heda sometimes painted taller vertical compositions Still life painters were especially prone to form dynasties it seems there were many de Heems and Bosschaerts Heda s son continued in his father s style and Claesz was the father of Nicholaes Berchem nbsp Jacob Gillig Freshwater Fish 1684 Flower paintings formed a sub group with its own specialists and were occasionally the speciality of the few women artists such as Maria van Oosterwyck and Rachel Ruysch 71 The Dutch also led the world in botanical and other scientific drawings prints and book illustrations Despite the intense realism of individual flowers paintings were composed from individual studies or even book illustrations and blooms from very different seasons were routinely included in the same composition and the same flowers reappear in different works just as pieces of tableware do There was also a fundamental unreality in that bouquets of flowers in vases were not in fact at all common in houses at the time even the very rich displayed flowers one by one in delftware tulip holders 72 The Dutch tradition was largely begun by Ambrosius Bosschaert 1573 1621 a Flemish born flower painter who had settled in the north by the beginning of the period and founded a dynasty His brother in law Balthasar van der Ast d 1657 pioneered still lifes of shells as well as painting flowers These early works were relatively brightly lit with the bouquets of flowers arranged in a relatively simple way From the mid century arrangements that can fairly be called Baroque usually against a dark background became more popular exemplified by the works of Willem van Aelst 1627 1683 Painters from Leiden The Hague and Amsterdam particularly excelled in the genre Dead game and birds painted live but studied from the dead were another subgenre as were dead fish a staple of the Dutch diet Abraham van Beijeren did many of these 73 The Dutch were less given to the Flemish style of combining large still life elements with other types of painting they would have been considered prideful in portraits and the Flemish habit of specialist painters collaborating on the different elements in the same work But this sometimes did happen Philips Wouwerman was occasionally used to add men and horses to turn a landscape into a hunting or skirmish scene Berchem or Adriaen van de Velde to add people or farm animals nbsp Willem van Aelst Still life with a watch c 1665 with typical dark background nbsp Willem Claeszoon Heda Breakfast Table with Blackberry Pie 1631 Heda was famous for his depiction of reflective surfaces nbsp Jan Davidszoon de Heem Vanitas 1629 nbsp Jan Weenix Still Life with a Dead Peacock 1692 set in the gardens of a large country house Foreign lands edit nbsp Frans Post scene in Dutch Brazil painted in 1662 some years after the colony was lost For Dutch artists Karel van Mander s Schilderboeck was meant not only as a list of biographies but also a source of advice for young artists It quickly became a classic standard work for generations of young Dutch and Flemish artists in the 17th century The book advised artists to travel and see the sights of Florence and Rome and after 1604 many did so However it is noticeable that the most important Dutch artists in all fields figures such as Rembrandt Vermeer Hals Steen Jacob van Ruisdael and others had not made the voyage 13 Many Dutch and Flemish painters worked abroad or exported their work printmaking was also an important export market by which Rembrandt became known across Europe The Dutch Gift to Charles II of England was a diplomatic gift which included four contemporary Dutch paintings English painting was heavily reliant on Dutch painters with Sir Peter Lely followed by Sir Godfrey Kneller developing the English portrait style established by the Flemish Anthony van Dyck before the English Civil War The marine painters van der Velde father and son were among several artists who left Holland at the French invasion of 1672 which brought a collapse in the art market They also moved to London and the beginnings of English landscape painting were established by several less distinguished Dutch painters such as Hendrick Danckerts The Bamboccianti were a colony of Dutch artists who introduced the genre scene to Italy Jan Weenix and Melchior d Hondecoeter specialized in game and birds dead or alive and were in demand for country house and shooting lodge overdoors across Northern Europe Although the Dutch control of the northeast sugar producing region of Dutch Brazil turned out to be brief 1630 54 Governor Johan Maurits van Nassau Siegen invited Dutch artists to paint scenes which are valuable in showing the seventeenth century landscape and peoples of the region 74 The two most well known of these artists were Frans Post a landscapist and a still life painter Albert Eckhout who produced ethnographic paintings of Brazil s population These were originally displayed in the Great Hall of the Vrijburg Palace in Recife 75 There was a market in Amsterdam for such paintings 76 and Post continued to produce Brazilian scenes for years after his return to the Netherlands The Dutch East Indies were covered much less well artistically nbsp Landscape with sugar mill Frans Post nbsp Landscape with a worker s house Frans Post nbsp Brazilian Indian warrior Tarairiu Albert Eckhout nbsp Bananas goiaba and other fruits Albert EckhoutSubsequent reputation edit nbsp Philips Wouwerman Travelers Awaiting a Ferry 1649 a landscape with Wouwerman s trademark highlight of a white horseThe enormous success of 17th century Dutch painting overpowered the work of subsequent generations and no Dutch painter of the 18th century nor arguably a 19th century one before Van Gogh is well known outside the Netherlands Already by the end of the period artists were complaining that buyers were more interested in dead than living artists If only because of the enormous quantities produced Dutch Golden Age painting has always formed a significant part of collections of Old Master paintings itself a term invented in the 18th century to describe Dutch Golden Age artists Taking only Wouwerman paintings in old royal collections there are more than 60 in Dresden and over 50 in the Hermitage 77 But the reputation of the period has shown many changes and shifts of emphasis One nearly constant factor has been admiration for Rembrandt especially since the Romantic period Other artists have shown drastic shifts in critical fortune and market price at the end of the period some of the active Leiden fijnschilders had enormous reputations but since the mid 19th century realist works in various genres have been far more appreciated 78 Vermeer was rescued from near total obscurity in the 19th century by which time several of his works had been re attributed to others However the fact that so many of his works were already in major collections often attributed to other artists demonstrates that the quality of individual paintings was recognised even if his collective oeuvre was unknown 79 Other artists have continued to be rescued from the mass of little known painters the late and very simple still lifes of Adriaen Coorte in the 1950s 80 and the landscapists Jacobus Mancaden and Frans Post earlier in the century 81 nbsp Gerard ter Borch Paternal Admonition or Brothel Scene c 1654 Amsterdam version Genre paintings were long popular but little regarded In 1780 Horace Walpole disapproved that they invite laughter to divert itself with the nastiest indelicacy of boors 82 Sir Joshua Reynolds the English leader of 18th century academic art made several revealing comments on Dutch art He was impressed by the quality of Vermeer s Milkmaid illustrated at the start of this article and the liveliness of Hals portraits regretting he lacked the patience to finish them properly and lamented that Steen had not been born in Italy and formed by the High Renaissance so that his talent could have been put to better use 83 By Reynolds time the moralist aspect of genre painting was no longer understood even in the Netherlands the famous example is the so called Paternal Admonition as it was then known by Gerard ter Borch This was praised by Goethe and others for the delicacy of its depiction of a father reprimanding his daughter In fact in the view of most but not all modern scholars it is a proposition scene in a brothel there are two versions Berlin amp Amsterdam and it is unclear whether a tell tale coin in the man s hand has been removed or overpainted in either 84 In the second half of the 18th century the down to earth realism of Dutch painting was a Whig taste in England and in France associated with Enlightenment rationalism and aspirations for political reform 85 In the 19th century with a near universal respect for realism and the final decline of the hierarchy of genres contemporary painters began to borrow from genre painters both their realism and their use of objects for narrative purposes and paint similar subjects themselves with all the genres the Dutch had pioneered appearing on far larger canvases still lifes excepted In landscape painting the Italianate artists were the most influential and highly regarded in the 18th century but John Constable was among those Romantics who denounced them for artificiality preferring the tonal and classical artists 59 In fact both groups remained influential and popular in the 19th century See also editArt of the Low Countries Delft School painting Dutch School painting List of Dutch painters List of painters from the Dutch Golden AgeNotes edit In general histories 1702 is sometimes taken as the end of the Golden Age a date which works reasonably well for painting Slive who avoids the term see p 296 divides his book into two parts 1600 1675 294 pages and 1675 1800 32 pages Confusingly one particular genre of painting is called genre painting the painting of some kind of everyday scenes with unidentified people But for example still life is also a genre in painting Fuchs 104 Franits 2 3 Lloyd 15 citing Jonathan Israel Perhaps only 1 survive today and only about 10 of these were of real quality Franits 2 Jan Steen was an innkeeper Aelbert Cuyp was one of many whose wealthy wives persuaded them to give up painting although Karel Dujardin seems to have run away from his to continue his work Conversely Jan van de Cappelle came from a very wealthy family and Joachim Wtewael was a self made flax tycoon See their biographies in MacLaren The fish artist Jacob Gillig also worked as a warder in the Utrecht prison conveniently close to the fish market Archived 2018 08 13 at the Wayback Machine Bankrupts included Rembrandt Frans Hals Jan de Bray and many others Franits 217 and ff on 1672 and its effects Fuchs 43 Franits 2 calls this oft quoted remark undoubtedly exaggerated Fuchs 104 Prak 2008 151 153 or Prak 2003 241 Prak 2008 153 a b c Fuchs 43 Franits book is largely organized by city and by period Slive by subject categories Franits throughout summarized on p 260 Fuchs 76 See Slive 296 7 and elsewhere Fuchs 107 Fuchs 62 R H Wilenski Dutch Painting Prologue pp 27 43 1945 Faber London Fuchs 62 3 Slive 13 14 Fuchs 62 69 Franits 65 Catholic 17th century Dutch artists included Abraham Bloemaert and Gerard van Honthorst from Utrecht and Jan Steen Paulus Bor Jacob van Velsen plus Vermeer who probably converted at his marriage 1 Archived 2010 09 23 at the Wayback Machine Jacob Jordaens was among Flemish Protestant artists Slive 22 4 Fuchs 69 77 Fuchs 77 78 Trip family tree Archived 2021 01 09 at the Wayback Machine Her grandparents various portraits by Rembrandt are famous Ekkart 17 n 1 on p 228 Shawe Taylor 22 23 32 33 on portraits quotation from 33 Ekkart 118 Ekkart 130 and 114 Ekkart Marike de Winkel essay 68 69 Ekkart Marike de Winkel essay 66 68 Ekkart Marike de Winkel essay 73 Ekkart Marike de Winkel essay 69 71 Ekkart Marike de Winkel essay 72 73 Another version at Apsley House with a different composition but using most of the same moralizing objects is analysed by Franits 206 9 Slive 123 Fuchs 42 and Slive 123 Slive 123 Franits 1 mentioning costume in works by the Utrecht Caravagggisti and architectural settings as especially prone to abandon accurate depiction Franits 4 6 summarizes the debate for which Svetlana Alpers The Art of Describing 1983 is an important work though see Slive s terse comment on p 344 See also Franits 20 21 on paintings being understood differently by contemporary individuals and his p 24 On Diderot s Art Criticism Mira Friedman p 36 Archived July 21 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fuchs 39 42 analyses two comparable scenes by Steen and Dou and p 46 Fuchs pp 54 44 45 Slive 191 Slive 1 Explored at length by Schama in his Chapter 6 See also the analysis of The Milkmaid Vermeer claimed by different art historians for each tradition Franits 180 182 though he strangely seems to discount the possibility that the couple are married Married or not the hunter clearly hopes for a return from his gift of punning birds though the open shoe and gun on the floor pointing in different directions suggest he may be disappointed Metsu used opposed dogs several times and may have invented the motif which was copied by Victorian artists A statue of Cupid presides over the scene Franits 24 27 Franits 34 43 Presumably these are intended to imply houses abandoned by Catholic gentry who had fled south in the Eighty Years War His self portrait shows him equally implausibly working in just such a setting Fuchs 80 Franits 164 6 MacLaren 227 Franits 152 6 Schama 455 460 discusses the general preoccupation with maidservants the most dangerous women of all p 455 See also Franits 118 119 and 166 on servants Slive 189 the study is by H U Beck 1991 Slive 190 quote 195 202 Derived from works by Allart van Everdingen who unlike Ruysdael had visited Norway in 1644 Slive 203 a b Slive 225 Rembrandt owned seven Seghers after a recent fire only 11 are now thought to survive how many of Rembrandt s remain is unclear Slive 268 273 Slive 273 6 Slive 213 216 Franits 1 Slive 213 224 Slive 277 MacLaren 79 Slive 279 281 Fuchs 109 Pronkstilleven Archived 2019 02 02 at the Wayback Machine in Oxford Dictionary of Art Terms Fuchs 113 6 Tierney Helen 1999 and only a few others see Slive 128 320 321 and index and Schama 414 The outstanding woman artist of the age was Judith Leyster ISBN 9780313296208 Archived from the original on 2021 01 12 Retrieved 2016 02 20 Fuchs 111 112 Slive 279 281 also covering unseasonal and recurring blooms Slive 287 291 Rudger Joppien The Dutch Vision of Brazil Johan Maurits and His Artists in Johan Maurits van Nassau Siegen 1604 1679 A Humanist Prince in Europe and Brazil ed Ernst van den Boogaart et al 297 376 The Hague Johan Maurits van Nassau Stichting 1979 van Groesen Amsterdam s Atlantic pp 171 72 With the Portuguese replacementr of the Dutch Maurits gave the Vrijburg Palace paintings to Frederick III of Denmark Michiel van Groesen Amsterdam s Atlantic Print Culture and the Making of Dutch Brazil Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 2017 pp 150 51 Slive 212 See Reitlinger 11 15 23 4 and passim and listings for individual artists See Reitlinger 483 4 and passim Slive 319 Slive 191 2 Advertisement or Preface to Vol 4 of the 2nd edition of Anecdotes of Painting in England based on George Vertue s notebooks page ix 1782 J Dodwell London Internet Archive Slive 144 Vermeer 41 2 Hals 173 Steen Slive 158 160 coin quote and Fuchs 147 8 who uses the title Brothel Scene Franits 146 7 citing Alison Kettering says there is deliberate vagueness as to the subject and still uses the title Paternal Admonition Reitlinger I 11 15 Quote p 13References edit Ekkart Rudi Ekkart and Quentin Buvelot eds Dutch Portraits The Age of Rembrandt and Frans Hals Mauritshuis National Gallery Waanders Publishers Zwolle 2007 ISBN 978 1 85709 362 9 Franits Wayne Dutch Seventeenth Century Genre Painting Yale UP 2004 ISBN 0 300 10237 2 Fuchs RH Dutch painting Thames and Hudson London 1978 ISBN 0 500 20167 6 Ingamells John The Wallace Collection Catalogue of Pictures Vol IV Dutch and Flemish Wallace Collection 1992 ISBN 0 900785 37 3 Lloyd Christopher Enchanting the Eye Dutch Paintings of the Golden Age Royal Collection Publications 2004 ISBN 1 902163 90 7 MacLaren Neil The Dutch School 1600 1800 Volume I 1991 National Gallery Catalogues National Gallery London ISBN 0 947645 99 3 the main source for biographical details Prak Maarten 2003 Guilds and the Development of the Art Market during the Dutch Golden Age In Simiolus Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art vol 30 no 3 4 2003 pp 236 251 Expanded version is Prak 2008 Prak Maarten 2008 Painters Guilds and the Art Market during the Dutch Golden Age in Epstein Stephen R and Prak Maarten eds Guilds innovation and the European economy 1400 1800 Cambridge University Press 2008 ISBN 0 521 88717 8 ISBN 978 0 521 88717 5 Reitlinger Gerald The Economics of Taste Vol I The Rise and Fall of Picture Prices 1760 1960 Barrie and Rockliffe London 1961 Schama Simon The Embarrassment of Riches An Interpretation of Dutch Culture in the Golden Age 1987 Shawe Taylor Desmond and Scott Jennifer Bruegel to Rubens Masters of Flemish Painting Royal Collection Publications London 2008 ISBN 978 1 905686 00 1 Slive Seymour Dutch Painting 1600 1800 Yale University Press 1995 ISBN 0 300 07451 4Further reading editAlpers Svetlana The Art of Describing Dutch Art in the Seventeenth Century Chicago University of Chicago Press 1983 review by Ernst Gombrich Franits Wayne E Dutch Seventeenth Century Genre Painting Its Stylistic and Thematic Evolution 2018 Yale University Press Grijzenhout F and Veen Henk The Golden Age of Dutch Painting in Historical Perspective 1999 Cambridge University Press Hochstrasser Julie Still Life and Trade in the Dutch Golden Age 2007 Yale University Press Liedtke Walter A 2001 Vermeer and the Delft School Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 87099 973 4 Alois Riegl The Group Portraiture of Holland reprint 2000 Getty Publications ISBN 089236548X 9780892365487 first published in German in 1902 fully available online Dutch and Flemish paintings from the Hermitage New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1988 ISBN 978 0 87099 509 5 Fully available online External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dutch Golden Age paintings Painting in the Dutch Golden Age National Gallery of Art A Brief Overview of the Dutch Art Market in the 17th century Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dutch Golden Age painting amp oldid 1186214793, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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