The works on display highlight the breadth of 17th-century Dutch creativity and the collector’s commitment to public access.
Johanna Koerten was a multifaceted artist in a wide range of media, including glass, silk, wax and watercolor. But she is most famous for her paper cuts, works that use small cuts and incisions in ...
How did Rachel Ruysch, seen by some in the Dutch Golden Age as Holland’s most famous painter — for a while, she outsold Rembrandt — slip from grand renown to barely a footnote? Such are the vagaries ...
In the world of Zheng Fenglin’s painting, elements of Dutch Golden Age still lifes, Surrealism, and Eastern philosophy blend together seamlessly, creating a tapestry of symbolism and quiet reflection.
Started in 2003 by Thomas Kaplan and his wife, Daphne Recanati Kaplan, the Leiden Collection is the largest private collection of Dutch Golden Age art, and the only Johannes Vermeer in private hand.
Carel Fabritius’ Self-portrait (c. 1645, oil on panel, 65 x 49 cm.) was once believed to be the work of Rembrandt. Courtesy the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam Rembrandt worked slowly. The ...
Rembrandt’s “The Unconscious Patient (Allegory of Smell)” is one of his earliest paintings, created around 1624–1625 when he was a teenager. It portrays a fainted young man being revived with smelling ...
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