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Rijksmuseum Exhibition Explores Dutch Fascination With Asian Luxury Goods
11/10/2015 4:29:19 PM
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Rijksmuseum Exhibition Explores Dutch Fascination With Asian Luxury Goods
A gallery view of the Asia > Amsterdam show at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.Erik Smits/Rijksmuseum
Picture this: A passion for luxury goods from the other side of the world enflames a newly affluent society; such artifacts are valued partly for their intrinsic beauty and quality but maybe even more as status symbols; local craftsmen and artisans spot an opportunity to produce and sell ever more sophisticated imitations. Surely I am talking about the contemporary craze in China for brands like Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Hermès and Château Lafite. Or am I?
The fascinating exhibition "Asia > Amsterdam: Luxury in the Golden Age," at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, tells the story of how 400 years ago, following the founding in 1602 of the Dutch East India Company (VOC, from the Dutch spelling), Dutch society was swept up by a passion for all things Oriental—for Chinese tea, silks and porcelain; for Japanese lacquerwork; for Indian ivory and ebony.
At the very top of Dutch society at the time, the de facto head of state, Stadtholder Frederick Henry, and his consort, Amalia of Solms, acquired magnificent lacquer cabinets, still in the Dutch royal family's collection. The wealthiest merchants and landowners adorned themselves with magnificent silks and bought the finest porcelain plates, vases and vessels. These were depicted in splendid portraits, such as the one in the Rijksmuseum show of the VOC official Wollebrand Geleynsz de Jongh—wearing an opulent silk outfit—painted by Caesar van Everdingen, and in sumptuous still lifes by the likes of Willem Klaesz Heda and Willem Kalf.
(Newsweek)
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