Vol. 164 / No. 1427
Vol. 164 / No. 1427
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston from 20th November 2021
2021 saw the opening at the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston (MFA), of two related initiatives: the Center for Netherlandish Art
(CNA), the first resource of its kind in the United States, and a suite of
newly installed corridors and galleries for Dutch and Flemish art. Both were
made possible through the generosity of two collector couples, Rose-Marie and
Eijk van Otterloo and Susan and Matthew Weatherbie. They have given or promised
114 Dutch and Flemish paintings, the library of the late art-historian Egbert
Haverkamp- Begemann and initial endowment funds for the CNA.
The Boston area has enjoyed a long engagement with
seventeenth-century Dutch and Flemish art through generations of collectors and
the attention of scholars in universities and museums. In recent years the MFA
has had distinguished curators in this field, among whom are Clifford J.
Ackley, now emeritus; Ronni Baer, who moved to the Princeton University Art
Museum in 2019; and Antien Knaap. Christopher Atkins, formerly a curator at the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, joined the MFA as the inaugural Van
Otterloo-Weatherbie Director of the CNA in August 2019 and has been working in
pandemic conditions to prepare the centre for its opening. It has now elegantly
appointed premises for its staff, library and pre- and postdoctoral fellows.
Yet can a research institute dedicated to the art of one small area of western
Europe command more than specialist attention, especially at a time when many
seriously question the cultural pre-eminence of Europe and its diaspora?
Atkins and his colleagues are well aware of the
challenges of promoting Dutch and Flemish art in a worldwide context. The idea
of a ‘Golden Age’ is dead. The Dutch are facing a reckoning for their colonial
past. There is now little room for the celebration of values that appealed to
many in earlier generations and that still prompt the interest of collectors:
Dutch religious tolerance, which has proved to be a historical myth, and
middle-class virtues expressed in secular subject-matter. The seven provinces
that rebelled against Spanish rule and established a republic were a model, in
part, for later republican movements. In The Rise of the Dutch
Republic (1856), John Lothrop Motley evoked parallels between the
emergence of the United Provinces and that of the United States. The commercial
oligarchs who ruled the former could readily serve as models for the ambitions
of the plutocrats who have long dominated the latter.
The United Provinces continues to be of historical
interest not least because modern capitalism, with its distinctive banking and
joint stock companies, took shape there earlier and more virulently than
elsewhere. The idea that the merchants and investors who dominated the Dutch
republic were beneficent has long since gone the way of other romantic
fictions. Class conflict was a big issue in the United Provinces as the
majority of the population laboured under crippling indirect taxation to pay
for the emerging country’s wars. Baer explored this topic in her MFA
exhibition Class Distinctions: Dutch Painting in the Age of Rembrandt
and Vermeer in 2015–16,1 yet in the displays of the new gallery
questions of class, the emergence of a nascent proletariat and the role
of het grauw (the vulgar masses) receive short shrift. The
titles given to paintings by Adriaen Brouwer and Cornelis Bega still include
the discredited term ‘peasants’. The fact that wealth was far less widely
distributed than popularly believed surfaces only occasionally in label
commentaries, as when a description of a portrait by Nicolaes Maes of Helena
van Heuvel (c.1680–83) states that she and her husband bought a house in
Amsterdam in 1664 for 42,000 guilders, ‘140 times the annual salary of a
skilled craftsman’. A grisaille painting by Adriaen van de Venne of a fictional
member of het grauw, named Kalis Boud, is tucked away in a dark
corner (Fig.14). He is a character from Van de Venne’s book Picture of
the Laughable World (1635), which explores the underclass of Dutch
society, such as the unemployed, beggars and war refugees; a copy of it is on
display beneath the painting.2
A good part of the wildly unevenly distributed
wealth in the new republic derived from overseas trade shading into rapacious
colonialism that fed a nascent industrial capitalism. The historian Sven
Beckert has dubbed this ‘war capitalism’.3 The Dutch were among its
harshest exponents, notably through their overseas joint stock trading
companies, the East India Company (VOC), and the West India Company (GWC). In
1619 the VOC destroyed the Javanese town of Jayakarta to build Batavia
(presentday Jakarta), and two years later slaughtered thousands on the Banda
Islands in pursuit of nutmeg and mace. The GWC transported thousands of
captives from West Africa to the Caribbean and Dutch Brazil. The GWC continued
its trade in enslaved Africans for most of the eighteenth century. A large
model of the VOC ship Valkenisse (Fig.15) is a commanding
presence in the largest gallery, yet rather than point to the exploitation
inherent in colonial resource extraction that such intimidating vessels
enabled, the text panel focuses on luxury consumption and wealth creation in
the metropolis.
Admittedly, it would be no small task for the CNA
project to decentre its field of study and to acknowledge the material
pluralism of the parts of the world affected by the spread of the Dutch and the
attendant movement of peoples and goods in the seventeenth century, in
particular in an institution that strictly separates cultures from different
geographical areas and where many expect the CNA to address Dutch and Flemish
art in a narrow sense. Atkins and his colleagues have made a good-faith start
by drawing attention to the role of African slavery in the production of Dutch
wealth. Among the many works of decorative art on display is furniture. Some
items include ebony – also used for picture frames – which, as a label states,
was felled and processed by enslaved workers. Most ebony came from the Dutch
Indian Ocean colony of Mauritius, where enslaved captives from Madagascar
laboured. In a gallery section on ‘Global Commerce’, the curators relate
paintings of a table laden with sugared sweetmeats by Osias Beert (Fig.16), a
young woman eating sugar from a silver canister by Godfried Schalcken and a
fantasy landscape of a Brazilian sugar plantation by Frans Post to the role of
enslaved Africans in the production of this tropical commodity. The
installation includes an informative video featuring Knaap and Mary Hicks, a
historian from the University of Chicago, which follows on from a speaker
programme that the CNA organised in November 2019, titled ‘Sugar in the Early
Modern Atlantic World’.
Atkins and his colleagues not only face the legacy
of capitalism and colonialism as well as the inevitable constraints of what is
at their disposal in the museum, they also have to negotiate what one might
term ‘collector values’. Many collectors have different assumptions and values
from those of scholars. Collector values tend towards celebration and nostalgic
attitudes that have been typical of heritage, in contradistinction to critical
history. Art museums have to perform the tricky task of balancing heritage with
history, and the MFA is no exception. Although in some galleries attention is
paid to slavery, one corridor presents without qualification an installation
called ‘Collecting Dutch and Flemish Painting: A Boston Story’. Some labels go
so far as to uncritically include the donors’ own observations on the works
shown. The subsections adhere to a standard set of tired tropes in the study of
Dutch and Flemish art, including ‘Sumptuous Still Lifes’, ‘Copper as Canvas’
and ‘The Lure of Italy’. These topics are all compatible with collector values.
They perpetuate received opinion rather than represent adventurous scholarship.
A research institute, including one in a museum,
has a responsibility to challenge received opinion. If it is held captive to
collector values this is unlikely to happen, whatever the wishes of its
director might be. To their credit, Atkins and his colleagues have put down
admirable markers of with Harvard University on a four-part online symposium in
April 2021, ‘Art Museums and the Legacies of the Dutch Slave Trade: Curating
Histories, Envisioning Futures’, and a collaborative project on the Dutch art
market with Northeastern University. These are early days, and Atkins and his
colleagues deserve the encouragement and support of scholars in museums and
academia to overcome the difficulties and limitations they face. It will take
great fortitude and determination on their part not to fall into the trap of
rearticulating received opinion or of contributing no more than incremental
gains in knowledge rather than initiating big ideas. This reviewer feels
optimistic that they can achieve a great deal.
1 Reviewed
by Dennis P. Weller in this Magazine, 158 (2016), pp.159–61.
2 A.
van de Venne: Tafereel van de belacchende werelt, en des selfs
geluckige eeuw, goed rondt, met by-gevoegde raedsel-spreucken, aen-gevvesen in
de boer-agtiche eenvoudigheyt, op de Haegsche kermis, The Hague 1635.
3 S. Beckert: Empire of Cotton: A Global History, New York 2014.