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Dutch Still Life Paintings 🎨 Pleasures of Not Knowing

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ArtStoryLab

ArtStoryLab

Күн бұрын

[Subtitle available in English]
What is it about 17th-century Dutch still lifes that makes them such compelling artworks? In this episode, I work through many layers of meanings in these pictures of silent, inanimate objects that reveal the paradoxes of the "Dutch Golden Age.” Find out how NOT knowing the one, “correct" meaning of a picture can lead to a rich and rewarding experience of looking at art.
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Music:
“I Think We Made It” by Spectacles Wallet and Watch on Epidemic Sound
“Rain Outside, Sun Within" by Arthur Benson on Epidemic Sound
“Etude No 1 For String Quartet” by Peter Sandberg on Epidemic Sound
Bibliography:
Julie Berger Hochstrasser, Still Life and Trade in the Dutch Golden Age (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007)
Simon Schama, The Embarrassment of Riches: An Interpretation of Dutch Culture in the Goldden Age (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1988)
Celeste Brusati, “Natural Artifice and Material Values in Dutch Still Life,” in Looking at Dutch Art: Realism Reconsidered, ed. Wayne Franits (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), pp. 144-157.
All footage and images are my own unless noted in the Image Credit.
Image Credit
Abraham van Beyeren, Banquet Still Life, 1667 / Los Angeles County Art Museum / Public Domain
Floris Claesz. van Dijck, Still Life with Cheese, ca. 1615 / Rijksmuseum / Public Domain
Abraham Van Beyeren, Still Life, around 1640-1680 / Rijksmuseum / Public Domain
Willem Kalf, Still Life with Fruit, Glassware, and a Wanli Bowl, 1659 / Metropolitan Museum of Art / Public Domain
Willem Claesz Heda, Still Life with Oysters, a Silver Tazza, and Glassware, 1635 / Metropolitan Museum of Art / Public Domain
Clara Peeters, Still Life with Cheese, Artichoke, and Cherries, around 1625 / Los Angeles County Art Museum / Public Domain
Willem Kalf, Still Life, c. 1660 / National Gallery of Art / Public Domain
Willem Kalf, Still Life with Nautilus Cup, 1665/1670 / National Gallery of Art / Public Domain
Nautilus cup, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, around 1630-1660, nautilus shell, silver gilt / Rijksmuseum / Public Domain
Willem Janszoon Blaeu and Josua van den Ende, Nova totius terrarium orbis geographica ac hydrographica tabula, 1635 / New York Public Library / Public Domain - modified
Jan Davidsz de Heem, Still Life: A Banqueting Scene, probably around 1640-41 / Metropolitan Museum of Art / Public Domain - modified
Juriaen van Streeck, Still Life with Peaches and a Lemon / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
Juriaen van Streeck, Still Life with a Moor and Porcelain Vessels, around 1670 / Alte Pinakothek, Munich / CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommon...
#ArtStoryLab #DutchGoldenAge #StillLife #ArtHistory

Пікірлер: 7
@doe_eyed831
@doe_eyed831 3 жыл бұрын
thank you so much for this video! i have to write an essay on exotic motives in dutch still lifes and you helped me a bunch :))
@matthewcondon1985
@matthewcondon1985 10 ай бұрын
I love them too!!! Well done; that was a wonderful presentation. They are amazing to see in person!!!
@mrpinilla
@mrpinilla Жыл бұрын
This was really good. Have you read “looking at the overlooked”?
@_weamela
@_weamela 7 ай бұрын
Wow! This was such a great video, thank you very much and well done!
@cindyoverall8139
@cindyoverall8139 9 ай бұрын
Oh that was wonderful! Great job! I do have a bit of extra knowledge that you may be interested in… W. Kalf was an antique dealer and some of his objects such as the Nautilus Cups come from the Russian Tsars. Also, the artists used different properties such as one metal, one ceramic, two organic, two glass, one cloth, etc. and they accentuated These properties to show their ability to paint. Your information was terrific. Btw, it’s still lifes, not lives. No big deal. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
@basc5836
@basc5836 10 ай бұрын
Добрый день. А где русские титры?
@grahamgillard3722
@grahamgillard3722 4 ай бұрын
They were celebrating their prosperity, with the occasional, timely reminder of its impermanence. The geographical origin of many of the items was to celebrate free trade - Capitalism. And remember, history shows Capitalism (and the Industrial Revolution) inherited slavery, and immediately began to eliminate it.
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