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Dutch Art in the 17 th Century
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Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Jul 03, 2015

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Page 1: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Dutch Art in the 17th Century

Page 2: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp, 1632

Page 3: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Joseph Wright of Derby, 1768

Page 4: Dutch Art In The 17th Century
Page 5: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

The Scientific Revolution

• The development of Royal Societies in the 16th

century – the sharing of knowledge, public demonstrations (Rembrandt, Thomas Wright)

• The move away from Ptolemaic astronomy and a heliocentric view of the universe

• Understanding Nature from Observation, not from authoritative texts or governing bodies

• The Idea that Human Reason can provide for the betterment of human life on earth (as opposed to Faith and Ceremony)

• The profound questioning of authority in any guise

Page 6: Dutch Art In The 17th Century
Page 7: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

The Modern magician

Blind Love

Questioning Gesture

Candle for Light and Skull

Fascinated Observer

Birdcage – if it lives (or dies)

Moonlight and the Enlightenment (reference to the Lunar Society)

2 sisters, torn between curiosity and distress

The Philosopher

The Bird in a glass Bowl which is about to be sealed and air pumped out

The Experiment With An Air Pump

Our Invitation

Page 8: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Giordano Bruno

• 1548 – 1600

• Burned alive by the Inquisition in Rome

• There is neither limit nor center to the universe – everything depends on the relative point of observation.

• Suggested the vast number of other worlds and universes

Page 9: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Michel de Montaigne

• 1522-1592

• Virulent critic of medieval Scholasticism• “I aim here only at revealing myself, who will

perhaps be different tomorrow, if I learn something new which changes me. I have no authority to be believed, nor do I want it, feeling myself too ill-instructed to instruct others.”

• Intellectual detachment is necessary to understanding.

• Proponent of diversity in nature and man, and the need for tolerance.

Page 10: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Rene Descartes

• 1596 – 1650

• Determined to find a unified system of nature based on mathematics

• The first step is to wipe away all earlier and accepted authority

• Believe only in that which can be proved through observation

• Cogito ergo sum

Page 11: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Thomas Hobbes

• 1588-1679

• Pre-social state of man is a life that is “nasty, brutish and short”

• We enter into a social contract based on mutual self-interest

• Sovereignty gains its authority through psychological reasons, not theological

• We are limited in our knowledge of the external world by our interpretations of the stimuli we receive

• Author of Leviathan

Page 12: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

John Locke

• 1632-1704

• Concentrated on the faculty of knowledge, or how we come to know what we know -epistemology

• Insisted on natural morality of pre-social man

• Ruling bodies that offend against natural morality must be deposed

• We are born with the tabula rosa

Page 13: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

The Principia

• Isaac newton (1642-1727)

• Offered irrefutable proof – mathematical proof – that Nature had order and meaning that was not based on Faith but on human Reason

• The notion of progress in the human mind toward an ultimate end

• If definable laws can be discerned to govern Nature, they can be discerned to govern men and society

• The notion that bodies at a distance are governed in their motion by a specific force that can be measured (gravity).

Page 14: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Dutch Painters of the Baroque

Characteristics of Dutch Art:

• No church or aristocracy to commission paintings

• Art has a bourgeois character

• Paintings used to cover bare walls, give pleasure to the eye

• Cheerful subjects, unpleasant ones are given a humorous slant

• Artists worked on the open market, not for patrons: specialization according to subject matter

• Small paintings for small homes

• Subjects were easily understandable, some allegorical representations, no religious ecstasies and few pagan myths

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Jacob van RuisdaelPieter de Hooch

Jan Steen

Willem Heda

Pieter Saenredam

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Dutch Painters of the Baroque

Jacob van Ruisdael, View of Haarlem from the Dunes at Overveen

• Flat horizon of the Netherlands: sky takes up ¾ of painting

• Sullen clouds, dramatically painted

• Receding spaces through dark and light passages

• Bleaching linen manufactured in Holland

• Long strips of treated cloth were spread out to bleach in the fields

• Openness and height, very distant and elevated point-of-view

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Jacob van Ruisdael, View of Haarlem with Bleaching

Grounds, c 1665

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Dutch Painters of the Baroque

Jan Steen, The Feast of Saint Nicholas

• Genre painting

• Saint Nicholas has visited the children with various results

• A girl grabs her doll as her mother pleads to look at it, or perhaps asks her to share

• Boy at left is crying over his disappointed gift

• Chaos in search for gifts

• Man on right points out to small child how Saint Nicholas descended the chimney

• Ten figures in a complex arrangement

• Complicated series of diagonals unify figures that seem to bend this way and that in reflection of one another

• Adult meaning to this children’s scene

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Willem Claez Heda, 1648

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Frans Hals, Archers of Saint Hadrian

• Responsible citizen mentality among the Dutch

• No static arrangements; no interaction

• Strong horizontal emphasis with vertical spears punctuating the composition

• Left group around dominant figure of Col. Johan Claez. Loo, his cane indicates his authority

• Right group is a separate unit: Lt. Hendrick Gerritsz. Pot holds a book (minutes of meeting?)

• Back to back groups

• Distinct individuality of figures

• Dynamically grouped with strong diagonals of composition

Page 22: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Dutch Painters of the Baroque

Common Motifs in Vermeer’s Paintings

• Checkerboard floor

• Horizontal beam ceiling

• Light from the left

• Heavy drapery and/or map

• Figures seen from the back or side

• Figures occupied in daily pursuit

• Sensitivity to light

• Back wall is always flat against picture plane

Page 23: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Vermeer, The Letter

• Light filtering from a unseen window at left

• We look in, they are unaware

• Figures framed by portal and a curtain

• Smile on servant, surprised look on the woman

• Woman is well-dressed, holding a lute

• A lute was a symbol of serenading, hence of love

• Is a love letter being brought?

• Sense of quiet expectation

Page 24: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Vermeer, Allegory on the Art of Painting

• Painter’s costume, chandelier and maps out of date

• Woman is Clio, Muse of History

• Laurel and garland, holds a trumpet of fame in her right hand

• Map frames “history”

• Nostalgia for bygone days of Catholic rule over Holland and Catholic patronage of artists

• Artist in his studio (Vermeer?)

• Looking in on figures who seem unaware

• Quiet and stillness

• Touches of light flicker across the map, revealing the pulled edges

Page 25: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Dutch Painters of the Baroque

Rembrandt, Anatomy Lesson of Doctor Tulp

• First great commission

• Dutch law: open cadavers of executed criminals only, allowed for entertainment purposes like this

• Specific anatomy lesson in January 1632

• Lessons took 4-5 days, Descartes may have attended this one

• Dr. Tulp is singled out seated in a chair of honor

• He wears a broad rimmed hat: academic badge of chairman

• His hands (alone) are prominently shown

• Cadaver’s body compared to the book at right

• Caravaggesque background

• Figures stare out into space

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Dutch Painters of the Baroque

Rembrandt, The Night Watch

• 18 men portrayed in the commission, represented according to how much they paid, but 29 figures in total, 2 figures cut off when the painting was cut down at left

• Civic guard group getting ready for a march, makes for a lively composition

• Captain Frans Banning Cocq holds a baton in right hand and wears a red sash, wears a gorget of steel barely visible under his white collar

• Captain gestures as if to speak

• Orders given to his lieutenant to march forward

• Central figures come forward

• Use of musket shown: musketeer in red is charging his musket by transferring powder into the muzzle from one of the wooden cartridges attached to his bandolier

• Figure behind Cocq is firing musket

• Third figure behind lieutenant is clearing the pan by blowing off the powder that remained there after the shot

• Deep chiaroscuro

• Liveliness of figures, psychological penetration

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The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq, 1642

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Dutch Painters of the Baroque

Rembrandt, Self-Portrait

• Probed states of human soul

• Changing lights and darks suggest changing of human mood

• Self-satisfied artist at the height of his career

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Oath of Claudius Civilis

Page 31: Dutch Art In The 17th Century

Judith Leyster, Self-Portrait

• Smile: she greets us casually, as does the fiddler

• Self-assured, charming, sociable

• Meets the viewer’s gaze, as if to speak to us

• Signed her paintings with her initials and a star, punning meaning of her name “leading star”

• Well-dressed while painting

• Quick sure brushstrokes