Painting & the Market in Early Modern Antwerp

Painting & the Market in Early Modern Antwerp
Author: Elizabeth A. Honig
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 374
Release: 1998-01-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780300072396

This study of the ways in which Flemish painting between 1550 and 1650 reflected the burgeoning capitalism of Antwerp, focuses not only on the market-scene paintings, but also on the interaction between painters and markets as it was influenced by merchants, governments and consumers.

Peasant Scenes and Landscapes

Peasant Scenes and Landscapes
Author: Larry Silver
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 393
Release: 2012-01-04
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0812222113

Larry Silver investigates the origins of new pictorial types and their media as a phenomenon of sixteenth-century Antwerp and interprets several pictorial genres as he charts their evolution and their role in the development and marketing of individual artistic styles.

Jan Van Kessel I (1626-79)

Jan Van Kessel I (1626-79)
Author: Nadia Baadj
Publisher: Harvey Miller
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre: Miniature painting, Flemish
ISBN: 9781909400238

The Antwerp artist Jan van Kessel the Elder (1626-1679) was esteemed throughout Europe for producing finely-wrought, miniature paintings on copper that depict a wide range of flora and fauna, exotic landscapes, and objects of natural artistry (e.g. shells, coral, precious stones). The 'natural' world presented in Van Kessel's art was not a transparent window onto nature, however, but instead was ambitiously crafted through the artist's reappropriation of Antwerp's artistic traditions, material culture, and artisanal knowledge practices. Through a combination of wit, technical virtuosity, self-referentiality, and allusions to local art-historical lineage, Van Kessel's paintings encourage viewers to simultaneously think about art, in terms of collecting, connoisseurship, citation, and media, and think anew about nature. This study uses Van Kessel's art as a distinctive lens through which to examine the relationship between craft, curiosity, and the pursuit of natural knowledge in the early modern period. Each chapter situates Van Kessel within a particular context where art and natural history intersected in late seventeenth-century Antwerp. Taken together, these investigations reveal how his production responded to a unique convergence of circumstances in that city which included the growth of a popular, commercial strand of natural history, a thriving culture of art collecting and connoisseurship focused on local artists, and a burgeoning luxury industry. Van Kessel's material and conceptual interventions into the representation of nature, such as his innovative, painted cabinets without drawers and witty signatures formed from insects and snakes, enabled him to redefine the scope of natural historical illustration and negotiate the value and status of the small-format cabinet picture.

Connecting Art Markets

Connecting Art Markets
Author: Sandra van Ginhoven
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 298
Release: 2016-11-14
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9004334831

Based on Guilliam Forchondt’s surviving business documentation in Antwerp and applying an aggregate and data-driven approach, Connecting Art Markets focuses on the role of art dealers in mediating the supply and demand for art, behaving in particular ways as to influence the markets for artworks in which they were strategically invested. Van Ginhoven presents her findings on Guilliam Forchondt’s workshop production volumes and transatlantic art trade flows, and evaluates the relationship between the production of paintings in the Southern Netherlands, their local, regional and overseas distribution channels, and the markets for these works in Europe and the Americas during the seventeenth century.

Pieter Bruegel and the Culture of the Early Modern Dinner Party

Pieter Bruegel and the Culture of the Early Modern Dinner Party
Author: Claudia Goldstein
Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2013
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780754667322

Claudia Goldstein mines a rich, interdisciplinary mix of sources to shed new light on the cultural history of sixteenth-century Antwerp. Recontextualizing some of Bruegel's work within the cultural nexus of the dining room, she offers a critical and entirely original examination of the function of early modern images for the people who owned and viewed them.

Jan Brueghel and the Senses of Scale

Jan Brueghel and the Senses of Scale
Author: Elizabeth A. Honig
Publisher: Penn State University Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre: Small painting, Flemish
ISBN: 9780271071084

Examines the small-scale works of the Flemish painter Jan Brueghel the Elder, and the aesthetic and cognitive operation of smallness in art of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.

Urban Achievement in Early Modern Europe

Urban Achievement in Early Modern Europe
Author: Patrick O'Brien
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 388
Release: 2001-04-12
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780521594080

Comparative urban history examines early modern economic and cultural achievements in Antwerp, Amsterdam, and London.

Antwerp in the Renaissance

Antwerp in the Renaissance
Author: Bruno Blonde
Publisher:
Total Pages: 350
Release: 2020-09-19
Genre:
ISBN: 9782503588339

This book engages with Antwerp in the Renaissance. Bringing together several specialists of sixteenth-century Antwerp, it offers new research results and fresh perspectives on the economic, cultural and social history of the metropolis in the sixteenth century. Recurrent themes are the creative ways in which the Italian renaissance was translated in the Antwerp context. Imperfect imitation often resulted from the specific social context in which the renaissance was translated: Antwerp was a metropolis marked by a strong commercial ideology, a high level affluence and social inequality, but also by the presence of large and strong middling layers, which contributed to the city's 'bourgeois' character. The growth of the Antwerp market was remarkable: in no time the city gained metropolitan status. This book does a good job in showing how quite a few of the Antwerp 'achievements' did result from the absence of 'existing structures' and 'examples'. Moreover, the city and its culture were given shape by the many frictions, and uncertainties that came along with rapid urban growth and religious turmoil.

Art Markets in Europe, 1400–1800

Art Markets in Europe, 1400–1800
Author: Michael North
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2016-12-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 135195704X

The reinvention of art-history during the 1980s has provided a serious challenge to the earlier formalist and connoisseurial approaches to the discipline, in ways which can only help economic and social historians in the current drive to study past societies in terms of what they consumed, produced, perceived and imagined. This group of essays focuses on three main issues: the demand for art, including the range of art objects purchased by various social groups; the conditions of artistic creativity and communication between different production centres and artistic millieux; and the emergence of art markets which served to link the first two phenomena. The work draws on new research by art historians and economic and social historians from Europe and the United States, and covers the period from the late Middle Ages to the early nineteenth century.