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Art, Dutch --- Art, Flemish --- Dutch art --- Nieuwe Ploeg (Group of artists) --- Ploeg (Group of artists) --- Flemish art
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This book offers a new perspective on the art of the Dutch Golden Age by exploring the interaction between the gift's symbolic economy of reciprocity and obligation and the artistic culture of early modern Holland. Gifts of art were pervasive in seventeenth-century Europe and many Dutch artists, like their counterparts elsewhere, embraced gift giving to cultivate relations with patrons, art lovers, and other members of their social networks. Rembrandt also created distinctive works to function within a context of gift exchange, and both Rembrandt and Vermeer engaged the ethics of the gift to identify their creative labor as motivated by what contemporaries called a love of art
Art, Dutch --- Gifts --- Social aspects --- Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn, --- Vermeer, Johannes, --- Donations --- Presents --- Generosity --- Manners and customs --- Free material --- Dutch Italianates (Group of artists) --- Vermeer, Johannes --- Van der Meer, Jan, --- Van der Meer van Delft, Jan, --- Vermeer, Jan, --- Vermeer van Delft, Jan, --- Meer, Jan van der, --- Der Meer, Jan van, --- Vermeer de Delft, Jan, --- Vermer Delftskiĭ, Ĭokhannes, --- Vermer, Ĭokhannes, --- Ferumēru, Yohanesu, --- フェルメール, ヨハネス, --- Rāmbirānt, --- Rembrandt Garmens van Reĭn, --- Rembrandt van Rijn --- Rembrandt van Reĭn, --- Lun-po-lang, --- Rembrandt, --- Van Rijn, Rembrandt Harmenszoon, --- Rijn, Rembrandt Harmenszoon van, --- Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn, --- Reimbrandt, --- Rembrandt van Rijn, --- רמברנדט --- רמברנדט הרמנסזון ואן־ריין, --- رامبرانت --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Dutch art --- Nieuwe Ploeg (Group of artists) --- Ploeg (Group of artists) --- Rembrandt --- Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn --- Rembrandt Garmens van Reĭn --- Rembrandt van Reĭ --- Lun-po-lan --- Van Rijn, Rembrandt Harmenszoon --- Rijn, Rembrandt Harmenszoon van --- Rembrandt Harmensz van Rin, --- Reimbrand --- Rembrandt, Vermeer, the Gift, Amateur Artists, Dutch Art, Golden Age.
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What are the 100 most important masterpieces from the Netherlands and Flanders created between 1400 and 1750? In this well illustrated book, over 100 curators from CODART, an international network for museum curators of Dutch and Flemish art, has compiled a canon of the best works from museums around the world. Each painting, drawing, sculpture or print on the list is profiled, with commentary by the curators. Included are works by Rubens, Rembrandt, Bruegel, Van Eyck, Hals, Memling, Vermeer, Metsu, de Hooch, Steen, and many more.
Art --- canons [standards] --- anno 1300-1399 --- anno 1500-1799 --- anno 1400-1499 --- Netherlands --- Flanders --- CODART --- 1350 - 1750 --- 14de eeuw --- 15de eeuw --- 16de eeuw --- 17de eeuw --- 18de eeuw --- Nederlanden --- Art, Dutch --- Art, Flemish --- Boekgeschiedenis (kennisdomein) --- Literatuur, muziek en beeldende kunst/grafiek (kennisdomein) --- Flemish art --- Dutch art --- Nieuwe Ploeg (Group of artists) --- Ploeg (Group of artists) --- CODART. --- 1350 - 1750. --- 14de eeuw. --- 15de eeuw. --- 16de eeuw. --- 17de eeuw. --- 18de eeuw. --- Nederlanden. --- Doudelet, Charles. --- Benvenuti, Benvenuto.
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"The early years of the seventeenth century saw a great flourishing of Dutch culture. In the arts, this was the era of Vermeer and Rembrandt, as well as the development of a local art market. Commerce extended around the world, with state-sponsored trading companies importing foreign goods. Politically, the Netherlands became the first nation-state in Europe, in 1648. In this book, Claudia Swan considers all these aspects together, examining the material culture of the period-the designed, manufactured, and hand-crafted materials and wares-to show how the Dutch encounter with so-called "exotic" goods played a fundamental role in the country's political formation"--
Art and society --- History --- Netherlands --- Commerce --- Abraham Ortelius. --- Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder. --- Claes Jansz Visscher. --- Cristoffel van den Berghe. --- Dutch Golden Age. --- Dutch art. --- Emanuel de Witte. --- Hendrick Goltzius. --- Jacques Callot. --- Jan Lievens. --- Jan van der Heyden. --- Man in Oriental Clothing. --- Melchior Lorck. --- Michiel Jansz. --- Petrus Plancius, Map of the Moluccas. --- Portrait of Maurits. --- Prince of Orange. --- Rembrandt. --- Robert Peake the Elder. --- Still Life with Flowers in a Vase. --- Vase of Flowers in a Window. --- Vermeer. --- Willem Kalf. --- global art history. --- global history. --- material culture.
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"Images of Miraculous Healing in the Early Modern Netherlands explores the ways in which paintings and prints of biblical miracles shaped viewers' approaches to physical and sensory impairments and bolstered their belief in supernatural healing and charitable behavior. Drawing upon a vast range of sources, Kaminska demonstrates that visual imagery held a central place in premodern disability discourses, and that the exegesis of New Testament miracle stories determined key attitudes toward the sick and the poor. Addressed to middle-class collectors, many of the images analyzed in this study have hitherto been neglected by art historians"--
Iconography --- miracles --- visual culture --- Jesus Christ --- anno 1500-1799 --- Netherlands --- Flanders --- Art and society --- Art, Dutch --- Art, Flemish --- Healing in art --- Miracles in art --- History --- Themes, motives --- Miracles. --- Dutch art --- Nieuwe Ploeg (Group of artists) --- Ploeg (Group of artists) --- Art --- Art and sociology --- Society and art --- Sociology and art --- Flemish art --- Social aspects --- Christ --- Cristo --- Jezus Chrystus --- Jesus Cristo --- Jesus, --- Christ, Jesus --- Yeh-su --- Masīḥ --- Khristos --- Gesù --- Christo --- Yeshua --- Chrystus --- Gesú Cristo --- Ježíš --- Isa, --- Nabi Isa --- Isa Al-Masih --- Al-Masih, Isa --- Masih, Isa Al --- -Jesus, --- Jesucristo --- Yesu --- Yeh-su Chi-tu --- Iēsous --- Iēsous Christos --- Iēsous, --- Kʻristos --- Hisus Kʻristos --- Christos --- Jesuo --- Yeshuʻa ben Yosef --- Yeshua ben Yoseph --- Iisus --- Iisus Khristos --- Jeschua ben Joseph --- Ieso Kriʻste --- Yesus --- Kristus --- ישו --- ישו הנוצרי --- ישו הנצרי --- ישוע --- ישוע בן יוסף --- المسيح --- مسيح --- يسوع المسيح --- 耶稣 --- 耶稣基督 --- 예수그리스도 --- Jíizis --- Yéshoua --- Iėsu̇s --- Khrist Iėsu̇s --- عيسىٰ --- Miracles (surnaturel) --- Guérison par la foi --- Dans l'art. --- Jésus-Christ --- Guérison par la foi --- Art and society. --- Christelijke kunst --- genezing --- Jésus-Christ -- Pays-Bas --- Guérison par la foi -- Pays-Bas --- Miracles (surnaturel) -- Pays-Bas --- Art et société -- Pays-Bas --- Miracle --- XVIe-XVIIIe s. -- 1501-1800 --- Christianisme --- Pays-Bas
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"Picturing Punishment examines representations of criminal bodies as they moved in, out, and through publicly accessible spaces in the city during punishment rituals in the seventeenth-century Dutch Republic. Once put to death, the criminal cadaver did not come to rest. Its movement through public spaces indicated the potent afterlife of the deviant body, especially its ability to transform civic life. Focusing on material culture associated with key sites of punishment, Anuradha Gobin argues that the circulation of visual media related to criminal punishments was a particularly effective means of generating discourse and formulating public opinion, especially regarding the efficacy of civic authority. Certain types of objects related to criminal punishments served a key role in asserting republican ideals and demonstrating the ability of officials to maintain order and control. Conversely, the circulation of other types of images, especially inexpensive paintings and prints, had the potential to subvert official messages. As Gobin shows, visual culture thus facilitated a space in which potentially dissenting positions could be formulated while also bringing together seemingly disparate groups of people in a quest for new knowledge. Combining a diverse array of sources including architecture, paintings, prints, anatomical illustrations, and preserved body parts, Picturing Punishment demonstrates how the criminal corpse was reactivated, reanimated, and in many ways reintegrated into society."--
Art, Dutch --- Crime --- Crime. --- Criminals --- Dead in art. --- Justice in art. --- Prosecution in art. --- Punishment in art. --- Punishment --- Punishment. --- Themes, motives --- Themes, motives. --- History --- Death --- 1600-1699. --- Netherlands. --- History of the law --- Criminology. Victimology --- Iconography --- History of the Netherlands --- punishing --- dead [people] --- visual culture --- criminals --- anno 1600-1699 --- Art --- Torture --- Exécution --- Mort --- Criminalité --- XVIIe s. -- 1601-1700 --- Pays-Bas --- Dead in art --- Justice in art --- Prosecution in art --- Punishment in art --- Penalties (Criminal law) --- Penology --- Corrections --- Impunity --- Retribution --- Crime and criminals --- Delinquents --- Offenders --- Persons --- Criminal justice, Administration of --- Criminology --- City crime --- Crimes --- Delinquency --- Felonies --- Misdemeanors --- Urban crime --- Social problems --- Criminal law --- Transgression (Ethics) --- Dutch art --- Nieuwe Ploeg (Group of artists) --- Ploeg (Group of artists) --- Social aspects --- Austrian Netherlands --- Aynacha Jach'a Markanaka --- Batavia --- Belanda --- Beulanda --- Çheer Injil --- Çheer y Vagheragh --- Eben Eyong --- Háland --- Herbehereak --- Herbehereetako Erresumaren --- Hò-làn --- Holand --- Holanda --- Holandija --- Holandska --- Hōlani --- Holenda --- Holland --- Holland Királyság --- Hollandi --- Hollandia --- Hōrana --- Huēyitlahtohcāyōtl in Tlanitlālpan --- Huland --- Hulanda --- Iseldiroedd --- Iseldiryow --- Ísiltír --- Izelvroio --- Karaleŭstva Nidėrlandy --- Katō Chōres --- Kē-tē-kok --- Keninkryk fan 'e Nederlannen --- Kerajaan Landa --- Kéyah Wóyahgo Siʼánígí --- Keyatiya Nederlandan --- Kingdom of the Netherlands --- Koninkrijk der Nederlanden --- Konungsríkið Holland --- Kraljevina Holandija --- Kralojstwo Nederlandow --- Kralstvo Holandija --- Kralstvo Niderlandii͡ --- Landa --- Madalmaad --- Mamlakat Hūland --- Mamlekhet Artsot ha-Shefelah --- Nederilande --- Nederlaand --- Nederlân --- Nederland --- Nederlande --- Nederlandene --- Nederlandia --- Nederlando --- Nederlands --- Néderlandzk --- Nederlatt --- Nederlendin Nutg --- Nedŏlland --- Neerlande --- Nethiland --- Niadaland --- Niderland --- Niderland Krallığı --- Niderlanddar --- Niderlande --- Nīderlandeja --- Nīderlandes Karaliste --- Niderlandʺi͡as --- Niderlandʺi͡as Korolʹuv --- Niderlandii͡ --- Niderlandla --- Niderlandlany Korolevstvosu --- Niderlandsem --- Niderlandsen Patshalăkh --- Niderlandtæ --- Niderlandtar --- Niderlandtar Korollege --- Niderlandty Kʺarolad --- Niderlandy --- Niderlandyn Vant Uls --- Niðurlond --- Niederlande --- Nirlan --- Nižozemska --- Nizozemsko --- Nyderlandai --- Nyderlandų Karalyst --- Olanda --- Ollandia --- Oostenrijkse Nederlanden --- Oranda --- Oranda Ōkoku --- Ot͡si͡azorksshi Nederlatt --- Paes Bass --- Paesi Bassi --- Paîs Bas --- Pais Basse --- Países Baixos --- Países Bajos --- Países Baxos --- Paisis Bajus --- Països Baixos --- Paixi Basci --- Pajjiżi l-Baxxi --- Payis-Bâs --- Payises Bashos --- Pays-Bas autrichiens --- Pays-Bas espagnols --- Pays-Bas méridionaux --- Peyiba --- Reeriaght ny Çheer Injil --- Reĝlando Nederlando --- Regni Nederlandiarum --- Regno del Paises Basse --- Regnu di i Paesi Bassi --- Reino di Hulanda --- Reino dos Países Baixos --- Ríocht na hÍsiltíre --- Royaume des Pays-Bas --- Southern Netherlands --- Spanish Netherlands --- The Netherlands --- Tìrean Ìsle --- Tlanitlālpan --- Ubuholandi --- Ubuhorandi --- Ufalme wa Nchi za Chini --- Uholanzi --- Ulanda --- Ulanna --- Vasileio tōn Katō Chōrōn --- Walanda --- Zuidelijke Nederlanden --- 1600-1699 --- Dutch Republic. --- Renaissance. --- afterlife. --- art and crime. --- art history. --- criminals. --- deviance. --- early modern. --- execution rituals. --- gallows. --- history of crime. --- material culture. --- public spectacles. --- punishment.
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