Spending a couple of days in the Netherlands with some friends has become an in-depth visit for me, as I am getting to know more about this country. Thanks to our host who had graciously offered to take us around to see some of the interesting sites here.
This country was once a territorial possession as Habsburg Netherlands of the Holy Roman Empire under Philip II of Spain (the successor of Charles the V). In the 16th century, that began to change. The Seventeen Provinces of the Netherlands began their revolt under the leadership of William I, Prince of Orange, in exile (c.1533-1584), in what is dated in history as the Eighty Years War or the the Dutch War of Independence (1568-1648). The Kingdom of Netherlands gained her independence in 1648 with the Peace of Münster.
At this point, there are three terms that I need to clarify for my own edification. The name Netherlands came into use in the mid 16th century. The country name is Netherlands (Nederlands). It has no ethnic origin, but Netherlands means "low country" or "lowlands." Only 50% of its land is above sea level. Reclaimed land from the sea and lakes comprises 17% of the country's land mass. Her people are called Netherlanders.
Sometimes, inaccurately referred to as Holland (especially by foreigners), this term strictly refers to only two provinces - north and south Holland, which together include the most famous and populous cities of Amsterdam - the capital city; The Hague - the seat of government; and Rotterdam - the biggest seaport in Western Europe. Except for the national football team, it can be referred to as Holland.
Her citizens and language are also identified as Dutch. People from Germanic lands were called Flemings, Theotonici, Doch, or Germans, in the 15th and first half of the 16th century. Around the mid 16th century, inhabitants of the Holy Roman Empire who spoke German were called Dutch or Douch. The Dutch language has developed from German and English. Dutch is also used as an adjective to identify other things that are Netherlandish.
Moving right along... The developments that followed after, during the 17th century, catapulted the Netherlands to being recognized as a world power as she entered the Dutch Golden Age in the fields of maritime and economic power (had the monopoly of trade with Japan), scientific discoveries, and in visual arts and culture.
My recent visit to Holland has brought me to discover more Dutch artists, whose phenomenal works have traveled and impressed the world audience. And what perfect timing it was to find them all exhibited in one place.
Mauritshuis is a museum situated in the heart of Den Haag (The Hague), in the Netherlands. It was closed for renovation for some time. After the work was completed in the last two years, it reopened its doors on June 27, 2014.
At this point, there are three terms that I need to clarify for my own edification. The name Netherlands came into use in the mid 16th century. The country name is Netherlands (Nederlands). It has no ethnic origin, but Netherlands means "low country" or "lowlands." Only 50% of its land is above sea level. Reclaimed land from the sea and lakes comprises 17% of the country's land mass. Her people are called Netherlanders.
Sometimes, inaccurately referred to as Holland (especially by foreigners), this term strictly refers to only two provinces - north and south Holland, which together include the most famous and populous cities of Amsterdam - the capital city; The Hague - the seat of government; and Rotterdam - the biggest seaport in Western Europe. Except for the national football team, it can be referred to as Holland.
Her citizens and language are also identified as Dutch. People from Germanic lands were called Flemings, Theotonici, Doch, or Germans, in the 15th and first half of the 16th century. Around the mid 16th century, inhabitants of the Holy Roman Empire who spoke German were called Dutch or Douch. The Dutch language has developed from German and English. Dutch is also used as an adjective to identify other things that are Netherlandish.
Moving right along... The developments that followed after, during the 17th century, catapulted the Netherlands to being recognized as a world power as she entered the Dutch Golden Age in the fields of maritime and economic power (had the monopoly of trade with Japan), scientific discoveries, and in visual arts and culture.
My recent visit to Holland has brought me to discover more Dutch artists, whose phenomenal works have traveled and impressed the world audience. And what perfect timing it was to find them all exhibited in one place.
The Mauritshuis
Mauritshuis is a museum situated in the heart of Den Haag (The Hague), in the Netherlands. It was closed for renovation for some time. After the work was completed in the last two years, it reopened its doors on June 27, 2014.
It is located on the Hofvijer - a small pond in the central part of The Hague, since 1644. The building is considered as a Dutch classic, architectural design by Jacob van Campen. Count Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen (1604-1679) had commissioned van Campen and his assistant - Pieter Post, to build this house which has become known as the Mauritshuis. In Dutch, huis means house.
There is a large exhibition hall, featuring Art Deco architecture, located in the Royal Dutch Shell Wing. Various exhibition programs are scheduled to be featured during the year.
Here is a view of the water through an opening, as we were descending to enter the building.
The museum fee is 14€. There is a Mauritshuis Tour from the Google app store that can be uploaded to your smartphone, or an electronic guide can be rented. In our case, we just relied on the English text.
The lobby is situated below sea level.
The Royal Picture Gallery
Joachim Beuckelaer, c.1533-1574
Kitchen Scene with Christ at Emmaus, c.1560-1565
Joachim Beuckelaer was a Flemish painter who hailed from Antwerp. He is famous for his market and kitchen scenes. By 1560, he had established himself as an independent master in this genre. He had a way of incorporating biblical events and themes in the background of his works.
At the early part of 1560s, he painted purely religious themes and he also designed stained glass. His works were sold at low prices, and soared after his death. The number of workshops he had and the abundant number of his works in his later years gave an indication of his success.
Rogier van der Weyden, c.1399-1464
The Lamentation of Christ, c.1460-1464
This altarpiece shows Mary kneeling by her dead Son, and mourning his death, with the disciples looking on, expressing their sadness. The bishop, who looks like an odd character in this piece, had commissioned this painting.
Rogier van der Weyden was a Flemish painter. Most of his surviving works have a religious theme - triptych, altarpieces and commissioned single and diptych portraits. His paintings traveled to Spain and Italy. His works were commissioned by the Netherlandish and foreign nobility.
By the late 15th century, he had become more popular than Jan van Eyck - recognized as the most influential painter from the north but forgotten by the 18th century, and he came to be known again - slowly, during the next 200 years. Today, he is recognized as the third of the great early Flemish painters, with Robert Campin and van Eyck.
He used oil as his medium, and this allowed him to work in great detail.
Our exit from the first floor, leading up to the second floor - where the masterpieces can be found.
While the renovation was going on at Mauritshuis, part of the collection - a selection of masterpieces - went on tour and was displayed in different museums, both at home and abroad. Among them was Girl with a Pearl Earring.
The tour of the masters' paintings was a big success, attracting millions of worldwide visitors. Vermeer's painting served as an ambassador for Mauritshuis, making the museum known as it was always mentioned in the write-ups about the painting. The other famous works that went around were The Bull by Paulus Potter, and The Anatomy Lesson by Rembrandt.
Locally, art lovers found the parts of the museum collection in Gemeemtemuseum in the Hague; at Paleis het Loo; the Groeninggemuseum in Bruges; the Dordrechts Museum; the Amsterdam Museum; the Frans Hals Museum, and other museums.
Paintings by Johannes Vermeer, c.1632-1675
Johannes Vermeer was a Dutch painter in the provincial genre. His specialty was painting domestic, interior scenes of middle-class Dutch life. These were usually set in the two small rooms in his house in Delft. This became apparent as the same furniture and decorations, and the same characters (mostly women) - in various compositions, appeared in several of his paintings. He had only produced a few paintings and left his family in debt, after his death.
He painted with great care and he had a penchant for using expensive pigments like lapis lazuli and Indian yellow. He is renowned for his treatment of light in his works.
He was moderately famous in Delft and the Hague, and his name became obscure after his death. It was only in the 19th century when his works were rediscovered by Gustav Friedrich Waagen and Théophile Thoré-Bürger, who published an essay, giving Vermeer credit for sixty six pictures of his supposed works. However, presently, only thirty-four paintings are universally considered as his original works. Since that time, his reputation escalated and he is acknowledged as among the greatest painters of the Dutch Golden Age.
Girl with the Pearl Earring, c.1665
Johannes Vermeer
View of Delft, c. 1660-1661
Close-up details
Johannes Vermeer
Diana and her Nymphs, c.1653-1654
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Paintings on the 2nd floor featured the works of Dutch masters and lesser known artists.
Paintings of Jan Steen, c.1625-1679
Jan Steen was born in Leiden. He came from a well-to-do, Catholic family that was engaged in the brewery business. He was the contemporary of Rembrandt and received his painting lessons from a German painter in Utrect - Nicolaes Knupfer. Knupfer's influences on Steen's work can be seen in his use of composition and color.
Steen was active in the art scene. He - along with Gabriël Metsu, founded a painter's Guild of Saint Luke at leiden. He worked as the assistant of a landscape painter - Jan van Goyen - until 1654, married his daughter in 1649 and had eight children, and moved to Delft to run a brewery De Sleng (The Snake) for three years, but without success. From here, he moved his family to Warmond for four years (1656-1660), north of Leiden, and to Haarlem for the next ten years (1660-1670). It was at this period - 1656-1670 that he was most productive. Of his 800 paintings, only around 350 have survived.
His subject matter was daily life, "lively to the point of chaos and lustfulness..." His work took shape from Dutch proverbs and literature. He also had historical, mythical, religious scenes; portraits; still lives; and natural themes. His mastery of light and attention to detail were most notable in his paintings of fabric and persian rugs. He used members of his own family as models, occasionally. He also painted self portraits.
First he lost his wife in 1669, and his father in 1670. In 1672, the art market collapsed.
First he lost his wife in 1669, and his father in 1670. In 1672, the art market collapsed.
His works were valued much by his contemporaries. It is believed that he was paid well. To survive the the art market collapse, Steen opened a tavern. He remarried in 1673 and had another child. He still remained active in the art scene and became the president of the San Lucas Guild in 1674. He passed away in Leiden in 1679.
His only recorded student was Richard Brackenburgh (1659-1702). Steen's influences are evident in his paintings' composition and themes.
Jan Steen
Portrait of Jacoba Maria van Wassenaer
also known as
The Poultry Yard, c.1660
Jan Steen
As the Old Sing, So Pipe the Young, c.1665
Jan Steen
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Paintings of Frans Hals, c.1582/83-1666
Frans Hals
Laughing Boy, c.1625
Frans Hals
LEFT: Portrait of Jacob Olycan (c.1596-1638), 1625
RIGHT: Portrait of Alletta Hanemans (c.1606-1653), 1625
Close-up of lace detail which is so well defined
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Paintings by George van der Mijn, c.1726/27-1763
George van der Mijn
Portrait of Elisabeth Troost, c.1758
George van der Mijn
Portrait of Cornelis Ploos van Amstel, c.1758
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Cornelis Troost, c. 1696-1750
Portrait of a Man, c.1730
Jacob van Ruisdael, c.1628-1682
View of Bentheim Castle, c.1652-1654
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Painting of Paulus Potter, c.1625-1658
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Painting of Paulus Potter, c.1625-1658
In his short-lived life, this Dutch painter produced a hundred works, specializing in painting animals in a landscape from "a low vantage point."
He was born in Enhuizen. As a child, he moved with his family to Leiden (1628), then to Amsterdam (1631). He studied painting under his father - Peter Simonz Potter.
He joined the Guild of Saint Luke in Delft. From there, he went to the Hague where he met and married his wife. His father-in-law made the introductions for him to meet the Dutch elite. He left after some criticism about a painting he had delivered in 1652.
He died of tuberculosis at the young age of 28 in Amsterdam.
His most famous painting was The Young Bull (not the one pictured below). Although it had been criticized earlier, it gained prominence in the early 19th century as an example of Romanticism.
Paulus Potter
Additionally, in my opinion, this is what makes this a master's painting - the life-like details in painting the bull's fur. It looked like the cow was in front of me.
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Peter Saenredam, c.1597-1665
The Mariaplaats with the Mariakerk in Utrect, c.1659
Dirck de Bray, c.1635-1694
Still Life with a Bouquet in the Making, c.1674
Rachel Ruysch, c. 1664-1750
Vase of Flowers, c. 1700
Jan Davidsz de Heem, c. 1606-1684
Garland of Fruit and Flowers, c. 1650-1660
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Paintings by Rembrandt, c.1606-1669
His full name was Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn, and he was a Dutch painter and an etcher who earned the recognition as one of the greatest painters and printmakers in Europe, and, of course, in his native land, during the Dutch Golden Age. At this time, the Dutch Golden Age painting was contrary to the Baroque style that was predominant in Europe. Rembrandt, along with the other Dutch painters led the innovative painting style that led to other new and important painting genres.
In his youth, he achieved much success as a portrait painter. Though, later on, he faced personal tragedy and financial hardships. Overall, his works remained popular throughout his lifetime, with his good reputation as an artist remaining high.
His masterpieces included his self-portraits, portraits of his contemporaries, and scenes from the Bible. In a way, his self-portraits at the different stages of his life served as an "intimate" part of his biography. His works showed his "knowledge of iconography..., his classical composition, and his observation of Amsterdam's Jewish population." He had so much empathy for the human condition and this earned him another honor as "one of the great prophets of civilization."
A prominent characteristic of his work is the use of chiaroscuro - a dramatic or theatrical presentation of light and shadow which he had seen in Caravaggio's work, and adapted to his designs. His characters were painted dramatically and lively, sometimes using his family members as models in his mythical, biblical, and historical themes. He was most praised for his narrative paintings with biblical themes by his contemporaries, as he skillfully showed the emotions and details of a scriptural story.
This brings to mind my favorite work of his - The Return of the Prodigal Son, which is at the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia. I had studied this painting in a class I took in psychology. The emotions in this work were palpable. I have yet to see it up close.
In the forty years or so as a painter and etcher, Rembrandt changed his style and form from time to time. In his personal life, his love life was colorful behind his wife's back, though he never remarried so as not to lose access to a trust set up by his wife for their son.
He lived beyond his means as he bought art, rarities, and antiquities. He almost got bankrupt. The authorities were, generally, accommodating to him except for the Amsterdam Painters' Guild - they introduce a new law that anyone in the same status as Rembrandt could not trade as a painter. But he was able to get around this rule. As arranged in a court order, he had to sell his treasures and his house to pay off his debts.
Ironically, with his fame, his death did not make waves - he was buried in an unmarked grave in Westerkerk.
Rembrandt
Rembrandt
The Moors, c.1661
Rembrandt
Portrait of an Elderly Man, c. 1667
Rembrandt
Simeon's Song of Praise, c.1631
Rembrandt
Portrait of Rembrandt with a Gorget, after c.1629
Rembrandt
Suzanna, c.1636
Rembrandt
The Laughing Man, c.1629-1630
Rembrandt
'Tronie' of a Man with a Feathered Beret, c.1635-1640
Rembrandt
The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp, c.1632
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Religion in the Netherlands
The state religion was Calvinism, though she was tolerant of other religions. However, Catholics in Utrecht and Gouda did not benefit much from the Golden Age period. After all, religion played a role in the Eighty Years War against Spain. The Catholics had their traditional celebrations in buildings that doubled as churches. They kept to themselves and lived in specific areas.
There was a split among the Protestant towns - there were bitter controversies between the Calvinist followers and the more permissive protestants known as the Remonstrants. The Remonstrants did not believe in pre-destination. They fought for freedom of conscience. The Calvinists became the Contra-Remonstrants.
Renaissance Humanism (with a central emphasis on the human realm) had gained a foothold through the initiative of Desiderus Erasmus (c.1466-1536).
With the religious sects that sprung up, religious tolerance was the practical thing to uphold. This attracted religious refugees, notably, the wealthy Jewish merchants from Portugal and the French Huguenots who were shopkeepers and scientists.
Arent de Gelder, c.1645-1727
Simeon's Song of Praise, c.1700
Jan van der Heydan, c.1637-1712
View f the Oudezijds Voorburgwal (oldest canal) with the Oude Kerk (oldest parish church) in Amsterdam, c.1670
Hendrick Ter Brugghen, c.1588-1629
The Liberation of Peter, c.1624
Gerrit Dou, c.1613-1675
The Young Mother, c.1658
Jan de Bray, c. 1617-1697
The Adoration of the Shepherds, c.1665
Gerrit van Honthorst, c.1592-1656
Woman Playing the Violin, c.1626
Willem van Aelst, c. 1627-1683
Flower Still Life with a Timepiece, c.1663
Johann Georg Ziesenis, c.1716-1776
Portrait of Princess Frederika Sophia Wilhelmina, c.1768-1769
A salon on the 2nd floor - anteroom
Lucas Cranach I, c.1472-1553
Virgin and Child, c.1515-1520
Quinteen Massys, c.1465/66-1530
Madonna and Child, c.1525-1530
Jan Provoost, c.1464-1529
Triptych with
The Virgin and Child, John the Evangelist and Mary Magdalene, c.1520-1525
Anonymous ( Germany)
The Birth of Mary, c.1520
Jan Gossaert, c.1478-1533/36
Madonna and Child, c.1520
Hans Holbein, c.1497-1543
Portrait of Robert Cheseman, c.1533
Next to the Mauritshuis is the Parliament - the Binnenhof - a complex of buildings which has been the meeting place of the States General, the center for Dutch politics.
I enjoyed this visit so much for it was a new learning for me.
What a thorough coverage. Thank you for bringing back memories of a great museum.
ReplyDeleteWonderful and comprehensive blog, Y. :) Thank you for posting.
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