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Dutch Etchers of the Seventeenth Century
Dutch Etchers of the Seventeenth Century
Dutch Etchers of the Seventeenth Century
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Dutch Etchers of the Seventeenth Century

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In "Dutch Etchers of the Seventeenth Century," Laurence Binyon offers a comprehensive exploration of the rich tapestry of artistic innovation that characterized the Dutch etching movement during its zenith. Anchored in rigorous art historical analysis, the text delves into the distinctive techniques, thematic concerns, and stylistic development of key figures, including Rembrandt and Ostade, while also situating these artists within the broader socio-political landscape of the era. Binyon’s scholarly approach, marked by eloquent prose and insightful observations, serves not only as a celebration of artistic achievement but also as an examination of the cultural underpinnings that informed these works. Laurence Binyon, a prominent art historian and poet, was deeply engaged in the study of visual arts, particularly during periods of great transformation. His extensive background at the British Museum and his passion for 17th-century European art provided a rich context for his writing. Binyon’s aim was not only to document but also to critically assess the artistic legacy of the Dutch masters, influencing generations of art historians and enthusiasts alike. This book is an indispensable resource for scholars, artists, and anyone fascinated by the intricate interplay of art and society. Binyon’s illuminating analysis and vivid descriptions breathe life into the etchings, inviting readers to see beyond mere aesthetics to grasp the profound narratives embedded in these masterpieces.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherSharp Ink
Release dateJun 15, 2022
ISBN9788028207014
Dutch Etchers of the Seventeenth Century

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    Dutch Etchers of the Seventeenth Century - Laurence Binyon

    Laurence Binyon

    Dutch Etchers of the Seventeenth Century

    Sharp Ink Publishing

    2024

    Contact: [email protected]

    ISBN 978-80-282-0701-4

    Table of Contents

    INTRODUCTION

    I

    II

    III

    OSTADE AND HIS SCHOOL

    I

    II

    III

    IV

    V

    THE ETCHERS OF LANDSCAPE

    I

    II

    III

    IV

    V

    VI

    VII

    VIII

    IX

    X

    THE ETCHERS OF PASTORAL

    I

    II

    III

    IV

    V

    VI

    INDEX

    INTRODUCTION

    Table of Contents

    I

    Table of Contents

    When

    , towards the close of the last century, Adam Bartsch began that monument of his industry and patience, Le Peintre Graveur, he devoted the first volumes of his twenty-one, not to the early engravers of Germany or Italy, but to the Dutch etchers of the seventeenth century. These were, in fact, the idols of the amateur of that day; and the indiscriminate praises which Bartsch lavishes on mediocre artists, like Waterloo or Le Ducq, sufficiently show how uncontested was their rank, and how fashionable their reputation.

    Since then their vogue has considerably declined. Rembrandt, of whom Bartsch treated in a separate work, is perhaps more admired, more studied than he ever was. His etchings, reproduced in more or less accurate forms, are not only familiar to artists and to students, but, to a certain extent, reach even the general public. But Rembrandt’s glory has obscured the fame of his countrymen and contemporaries. Like Shakespeare by the side of the lesser Elizabethans, he stands forth alone and dazzling, and, though they enjoy a titular renown, they suffer a comparative neglect.

    Yet, if Rembrandt is by far the greatest, others are great also. The following pages are designed to serve as a sort of introduction to the more notable among these etchers, in the same way that Mr. Hamerton’s monograph, the first of the present series of the Portfolio, was intended as an introduction to the etched work of Rembrandt.

    And first, let us warn the reader who is familiar perhaps with masterpieces like the Christ Healing the Sick and Rembrandt Drawing at a Window, Clement de Jonghe, or The Three Trees, but who is not yet acquainted with the etchings of Ostade and Paul Potter, not to expect too much. Few of these lesser masters approach Rembrandt in the specific qualities of the etcher: he is beyond them all in draughtsmanship, far beyond them in the intensity of his imagination. Yet the best of them must rank high.

    It is his immensity of range which marks off Rembrandt, more even than his transcendent powers, from the rest of the Dutch etchers. Not only did his production exceed by far the most prolific among them, but he touched on almost every side of life. Yet he was not the school in epitome, as a hasty enthusiasm might affirm. With all his breadth of sympathy, his insatiable curiosity, he was not quite universal. The life of animals, the growth and beauty of trees, the motion of the sea-waves—none of these attracted Rembrandt deeply. And here, to supplement him, we have the work of men like Potter, Backhuysen, Ruisdael, each developing his peculiar vein.

    All of these etchers whom we have to consider are, however, independent of Rembrandt and his influence. The Rembrandt school has been expressly excluded from the present monograph. For, interesting as some of those artists are, the first thought suggested by their work is that it recalls Rembrandt: the second thought, that it is not Rembrandt. It is their relation to their master that interests us rather than any intrinsic excellence of their own.

    Only the independent masters, therefore, are exhibited here; and from these groups of etchers several of the greatest names in Dutch art are absent. Frans Hals, Jan Steen, Vermeer of Delft, Hobbema, De Hooch—none of these, so far as we know, has left a single plate. Adriaen Brouwer etched a few; but they afford only the slightest indications of his genius. And Albert Cuyp, who is the author of half a dozen small etchings, showed in this line but little of his skill, and did not apparently pursue it farther.

    Yet the quantity of etched plates produced during this period in Holland is immense, and most of the best work was published within the same two or three decades. To take a single year, 1652, Potter’s studies of horses, a set of cattle by Berchem, several plates by Du Jardin, one of the finest pieces of Ostade, La Fileuse, appeared in it; while the year following saw the publication of Adriaen van de Velde’s largest etching, and Ruisdael’s Three Oaks had been issued but three years earlier. Rembrandt’s Tobit Blind is dated 1651, and the Three Crosses 1653. This great fecundity has been necessarily a source of some embarrassment to the writer; and though a number of minor men have been omitted, several etchers have been included, whom for the sake of completeness it was necessary to give some account of, but whom it is hard to make interesting, and about whom enthusiasm is impossible.

    II

    Table of Contents

    Treating, as it does, of so considerable a number of masters, the present monograph aims at indicating, as far as space would allow, something of the relations between them, and at tracing the interdependence of the various schools. To have taken the etchers separately and considered their work apart, would have meant the compilation of a tediously crowded catalogue.

    But when once the masters are approached from the historical side, it is impossible to treat them simply as etchers. It is as painters that they influenced and were influenced. Consequently some account has had to be taken of them as painters. And since some who produced little, and that little not very remarkable, in etching, are yet of great significance as artists, it has been impossible to treat each man simply on his merits as an etcher. Hence, for instance, much more space has been devoted to Ruisdael than the quality or the amount of his work on copper strictly merits.

    The lives of most of these artists have, till recently, rested on a somewhat shifting foundation. Dates of birth and death have fluctuated in various authors with easy rapidity. Of some, even now, nothing certain is known.

    But the researches of Dr. van der Willigen, Dr. Bredius, Dr. Hofstede de Groot, and others in the archives of the Dutch cities have proved much, disproved more, and set the whole subject

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