Enfilade

Exhibition | Dutch Art in a Global Age

Posted in books, catalogues, exhibitions by Editor on October 13, 2023

Now on view at the NC Museum of Art and arriving at the Kimbell in the fall of 2024:

Dutch Art in a Global Age: Masterpieces from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, 16 September 2023 — 7 January 2024
Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, 10 November 2024 — 9 February 2025

Jan van Huysum, Flowers in a Terracotta Vase, 1730, oil on panel, 80 × 61 cm (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Promised gift of Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo, in support of the Center for Netherlandish Art, L-R 13.2019).

In the seventeenth century, Dutch merchants sailed across seas and oceans, joining trade networks that stretched from Asia to the Americas and Africa. This unprecedented movement of goods, ideas, and people gave rise to what many consider the first age of globalization and sparked an artistic boom in the Netherlands.

Dutch Art in a Global Age brings together paintings by Rembrandt, Frans Hals, Gerrit Dou, Jacob van Ruisdael, Maria Schalcken, Rachel Ruysch, and other celebrated artists from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston’s renowned collection. These are joined by prints, maps, and stunning decorative objects in silver, porcelain, glass, and more, from the seventeenth and the first half of the eighteenth centuries. Exploring how Dutch dominance in international commerce transformed life in the Netherlands and created an extraordinary cultural flourishing, the exhibition also includes new scholarship that contextualizes seventeenth-century Dutch art within the complex histories of colonial expansion, wealth disparity, and the transatlantic slave trade during this period.

Christopher D.M. Atkins, ed., Dutch Art in a Global Age (Boston: MFA Publications, 2023), 224 pages, ISBN: 978-0878468911, £54 / $60. With text by Christopher Atkins, Pepijn Brandon, Simona Di Nepi, Stephanie Dickey, Michele Frederick, Hanneke Grootenboer, Katherine Harper, Courtney Leigh Harris, Mary Hicks, Anna Knaap, Rhona MacBeth, Katrina Newbury, Christine Storti, Gerri Strickler, Claudia Swan, Jeroen van der Vliet, and Benjamin Weiss.