澳门六合彩开奖现场直播 Boston to Open Suite of Seven Renovated Galleries Dedicated to New Displays and Interpretation of Dutch and Flemish Art

Center for Netherlandish Art to Open in Conjunction with New Suite of Galleries

BOSTON (November 18, 2021)鈥擨n the 17th century, global commerce fueled the economy of the Netherlands and Flanders and sparked an artistic boom. Merchants sailed from Amsterdam, Antwerp and other ports across seas and oceans, joining trade networks that stretched from Asia to the Americas and Africa. This unprecedented movement of goods, ideas and people, both free and enslaved, gave rise to what some have called the first age of globalization. On November 20, 2021, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (澳门六合彩开奖现场直播), opens a suite of seven newly renovated galleries that explore the rich visual culture of the Dutch Republic and Flanders during this time, bringing together nearly 100 paintings by the greatest masters鈥攊ncluding Rembrandt van Rijn, Peter Paul Rubens, Gerrit Dou, Frans Hals and Anthony van Dyck鈥攊n addition to works on paper and decorative arts such as silver and Delft ceramics. The new installations examine a variety of themes: women artists and patrons; the growth of the art market; and the unexpected connection between still life paintings, the sugar trade and slavery. Many of the featured paintings are drawn from a 2017 gift from Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo and Susan and Matthew Weatherbie, which elevated the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播鈥檚 holdings into one of the country鈥檚 foremost collections of Dutch art from the 17th century and significantly strengthened its representation of Flemish works from the period. The installation features additional gifts and purchases, supplementing the 2017 gift: seven Dutch and Flemish pictures from the collections of Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo, Maida and George Abrams and Kathleen and Martin Feldstein. Other highlights are a selection of Dutch medals from the Abrams Collection and a silver mounted coconut cup and a pair of silver tazze from the Van Otterloo Collection. The 2017 landmark donation also included endowment funds to establish the Center for Netherlandish Art (CNA), an innovative center for scholarship housed at the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播 and the first resource of its kind in the U.S. The CNA will launch in conjunction with the new galleries.

鈥淭he newly installed galleries combine existing and new collections and link historical context to issues of our time. The complicated power dynamics of international trade, the creation of art markets, the evolution of domestic space defined by class鈥 all are addressed in narrative groupings of works that celebrate many known and unknown artists,鈥 said Matthew Teitelbaum, Ann and Graham Gund Director. 鈥淭he role of the museum is to re-evaluate accepted storylines and traditions鈥攁ffirming while broadening, challenging and deepening our assumptions about the past. We do so by acknowledging both the power and beauty of great works of art, and affirming sustaining value in the work of Rembrandt, Hals and Rubens alongside discoveries like Wautier, Schalcken and Ruysch. The presentation is the result of collaboration among scholars, artists and cultural thinkers both within and outside the Museum, who came together to share ideas and create new meaning.鈥

When the galleries open, an installation in the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播鈥檚 Upper Hemicycle will feature five paintings by Michaelina Wautier (1604鈥1689)鈥攎aking their public debut after 370 years. The rare series, titled The Five Senses (1650, Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Collection), constitutes five of the only 40 or so known works by Wautier, an artist from Brussels who until recently had been omitted from art history. Rather than depicting the senses as experienced by idealized women, the detailed portrayals of Sight, Sound, Hearing, Taste and Touch focus on boys performing everyday activities. One of the great mysteries in the study of Flemish art has been the whereabouts of this set, which resurfaced in 2020 and showcases Wautier鈥檚 innovative conception, complex choreography of glances and gestures, and ability to convey different textures.

Arguably the greatest early Netherlandish painting in North America, Saint Luke Drawing the Virgin (about 1435鈥40) by Rogier van der Weyden (about 1400鈥1464) introduces the 鈥淒utch Specialties鈥 gallery and provides a conceptual starting point for the rest of the suite. Many of the genres that Dutch artists would become famous for exploring in the 17th century are drawn from elements in sacred paintings by Van der Weyden and his 15th-century contemporaries. The gallery delves into these genres: artists in their studios, flower still lifes, architectural painting, portraits and head studies (called 鈥渢ronies鈥 in Dutch), and painstaking depictions of textures. The paintings include major works by Rembrandt van Rijn (1606鈥1669), Pieter Saenredam (1597鈥1665) and Balthasar van der Ast (1593 or 1594鈥1657) as well as two works that will be the first paintings by early modern Dutch women to enter the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播鈥檚 collection. Self-Portrait of the Artist in Her Studio (about 1680) by Maria Schalcken (1645/50鈥揵efore 1700) was previously attributed to her brother and teacher Godfried Schalcken, but conservation treatment revealed Maria鈥檚 signature in the upper left corner鈥攁nd thus established the painting, a Van Otterloo gift, as a self-portrait. Still Life with Flowers (1709) is an exquisite example by Rachel Ruysch (1664鈥1750), the daughter of a well-known professor of botany and anatomy, who is now ranked among the leading Dutch still life painters. 

A new rotating gallery in the suite will be dedicated to presenting research developed at the CNA. The inaugural presentation analyzes the competitiveness of the Dutch art market in the 17th century, with displays created in collaboration with professors and graduate students from the Experience Design Lab and the Co-Lab for Data Impact at Northeastern University. The gallery explores how painters developed instantly recognizable styles and motifs to adapt to the demands of the market. Willem Claesz. Heda (1594鈥1680), for example, created a new brand of monochrome still life, while Jacob van Ruisdael (1628 or 1629鈥1682) specialized in sweeping views of Haarlem. By contrast, Jan van Goyen (1596鈥1656) used cheaper pigments and faster working methods to offer his depictions of the Dutch countryside at competitive prices. 

In the decades around 1600, the Dutch mastered the ocean; their world-spanning routes linked ports in Europe, Africa, Asia and the Americas. Burgeoning trade with Asia was managed by the Dutch East India company (or VOC from its Dutch name), founded in 1602, the world鈥檚 first multinational cooperation. On view in the 鈥淕lobal Commerce鈥 gallery, seascapes by artists including Willem van de Velde, the Younger (1633鈥1707) and Ludolf Bakhuizen (1631鈥1708) celebrate the Dutch Republic鈥檚 seafaring prowess, and atlases by Joan Blaeu (1596鈥1673) outline the vast trade networks from the North Sea to the Indian Ocean and the Sea of Japan. Still lifes by artists including Willem Kalf (1619鈥1693) and Frans Snyders (1579鈥1657) showcase a variety of local and imported commodities, including precious glassware produced in Antwerp and blue-and-white porcelain from China. A major theme is the darker history of international trade, highlighted with a special emphasis on sugar. Sugar production in Brazil depended on the work of large numbers of enslaved laborers, and the juxtaposition of still lifes containing sweets by Osias Beert (about 1580鈥1623), a Brazilian landscape by Frans Post (1612-1680), and a map of Brazil with a sugar mill in Blaeu鈥檚 atlas will explore the often-overlooked connection between sugar consumption, plantation labor and slavery. One extraordinary object sums up the cosmopolitan taste of Amsterdam artists and patrons: a coconut turned into a sea monster battling Neptune, through its elaborate silver mount. This fanciful work of art was made in 1607 by Frederiks Andries (1566-1627) and donated by Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo in 2020.

The Eighty Years鈥 War (1568鈥1648) split the Netherlands into an independent, largely Protestant Dutch Republic in the north and a Catholic Southern Netherlands ruled by Spain. Divergent artistic styles emerged in the two regions. A grand gallery, the largest one in the suite, is dedicated to 鈥淒utch and Flemish Masterpieces,鈥 presenting many of the greatest treasures in the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播 from both cultures. Among the many highlights are Self-Portrait as Icarus with Daedalus (about 1618) painted by a 19-year-old Anthony van Dyck (1599鈥1641), Mulay Ahmad (about 1609) by Peter Paul Rubens (1577鈥1640) and three great portraits by Rembrandt, including the moving Aeltje Uylenburgh (1632). A section of this gallery has been transformed into an immersive installation that evokes an Amsterdam house in the second half of the 17th-century, teeming with exquisite paintings, silver, furniture and Delft ceramics. A doll鈥檚 house filled with nearly 200 silver and porcelain miniatures as well as an elaborately carved beeldenkast (cupboard), both on loan from the Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Collection, are the focal points of this intimate space.

Measuring nearly 10 by 15 feet, The Triumph of the Winter Queen: Allegory of the Just (1636) by Gerrit van Honthorst (1590鈥1656) is the focus of the 鈥淐reativity in Exile鈥 gallery. Part allegory and part family portrait, the monumental painting was commissioned by Elizabeth Stuart, formerly Queen of Bohemia (nicknamed the 鈥淲inter Queen鈥 for her short reign), long after she was exiled to the Netherlands in 1621. The gallery also displays ceramics donated to the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播 by Frits and Rita Markus, who had to abandon and then rebuild their collection after fleeing persecution in the Netherlands during World War II. Though separated by more than 300 years鈥攁nd by different mediums鈥攖hese ceramics and Honthorst鈥檚 masterpiece are linked by the creative impulse and by perseverance in the face of loss.

Throughout the galleries, newly produced videos provide additional context on specific topics or works of art. These include insights from Boston-based artist Eben Haines on Rembrandt鈥檚 Artist in his Studio (about 1628); Courtney Harris, the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播鈥檚 Assistant Curator, Decorative Arts and Sculpture, Art of Europe, on the Dutch doll鈥檚 house; Nasser Rabbat, Aga Khan Professor of Islamic Architecture at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, on Rubens鈥 Mulay Ahmad (about 1609); and Mary Hicks, Assistant Professor of History at the University of Chicago, with Antien Knaap, the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播鈥檚 Assistant Curator of Paintings, Art of Europe, on the connections between the sugar trade and slavery in the 17th century.

The new installations were organized by Frederick Ilchman, Mrs. Russell W. Baker Curator of Paintings and Chair, Art of Europe; Antien Knaap, Assistant Curator of Paintings; Courtney Harris, Assistant Curator of European Decorative Arts and Sculpture; Simona Di Nepi, Charles and Lynn Schusterman Curator of Judaica; Christopher Atkins, Van Otterloo鈥揥eatherbie Director of the Center for Netherlandish Art; and Benjamin Weiss, Leonard A. Lauder Senior Curator of Visual Culture. Regular consultation with an Advisory Group of experts in history and art history informed the interpretation of the galleries. The group鈥檚 participants were Pepijn Brandon, Assistant Professor of History, Free University of Amsterdam; Mary Hicks, Assistant Professor of History, University of Chicago; Jessie Park, Nina and Lee Griggs Assistant Curator of European Art, Yale University Art Gallery; Nasser Rabbat, Aga Khan Professor of Islamic Architecture, MIT; and Michael Zell, Associate Professor of Art History, Boston University.

In celebration of the galleries鈥 opening on November 20, chamber players from Handel and Haydn Society and soprano Sonja DuToit Tengblad have recorded a concert, available on H+H鈥檚 website, that paints a harmonic portrait of 17th-century Netherlands, with Honthorst鈥檚 Triumph of the Winter Queen serving as a spectacular backdrop. The concert features music by composers both well-loved and little-known, performed on contemporaneous instruments from the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播鈥檚 collection.

About the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Founded on February 4, 1870, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (澳门六合彩开奖现场直播), stands on the historic homelands of the Massachusett people, a site which has long served as a place of meeting and exchange among different nations. The Museum opened its doors to the public on July 4, 1876鈥攖he nation鈥檚 centennial鈥攁t its original location in Copley Square. Over the next several decades, the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播鈥檚 collection and visitation grew exponentially, and in 1909, the Museum moved to its current home on Huntington Avenue. Today, the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播 houses a global collection encompassing nearly 500,000 works of art, from ancient to contemporary.

The Museum is located at 465 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115. For more information, call 617.267.9300, visit mfa.org or follow the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播 on , and .

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Amelia Kantrovitz
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