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Still Life and Trade in the Dutch Golden Age [Hardcover]

Julie Berger Hochstrasser (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 23, 2007 0300100388 978-0300100389 First Edition, First Printing.
The magnificent still life paintings of the Dutch Golden Age depict tables richly laid with an array of products that attest to the vast scope of the Dutch trade network. These striking pictures reveal much more about Dutch society and capitalist culture of the seventeenth century than has been previously understood, says the author of this engaging book. Julie Berger Hochstrasser explores for the first time the significance of various foods and commodities rendered on canvas during the Dutch Republic’s phenomenal rise to prosperity.
From domestic cheese to the wines of Europe to exotic commodities like pepper, porcelain, and even slaves imported by the Dutch East and West India Companies, the fruits of global commerce glowed in paintings of the time. Yet an uncomfortable tension exists between these elegant representations of products of trade and the darker aspects of their commodity histories. With penetrating insights, Hochstrasser offers a new and provocative view of Dutch still life paintings.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

In this exhaustively researched, mostly accessible, and richly illustrated volume, Julie Berger Hochstrasser, a professor of art history at the University of Iowa, examines the relationship of Dutch still-life painting and Holland's burgeoning international trade in the seventeenth century. In clear prose that lapses only occasionally into scholar-speak, Hochstrasser shows how many of the greatest artists of the day glorified and at times tacitly critiqued what Simon Schama has called that country's "embarrassment of riches." The painters weren't simply documenting their national elite's conspicuous consumption of cheeses, bread, fish, and salt, they were patriotically exalting its great wealth and, at the same time, acknowledging the continuing reality of hunger among the poor. And by depicting the import of refined sugar, tropical fruits, textiles, silver, and other luxuries from around the New World, the artists provided, consciously or not, a context in which to tally up the human costs associated with the production of said goods, including slavery in Dutch-controlled territories in Brazil, West Africa, and elsewhere. Nance, Kevin

Book Description

The magnificent still life paintings of the Dutch Golden Age reveal surprising things about Dutch society and capitalist culture of the seventeenth century, says the author of this provocative book. She explores the significance of the array of products rendered on canvas and discusses the full meaning of these fruits of global commerce.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Yale University Press; First Edition, First Printing. edition (August 23, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0300100388
  • ISBN-13: 978-0300100389
  • Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 7.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #365,239 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well documented. affordable, interesting work, November 20, 2007
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This review is from: Still Life and Trade in the Dutch Golden Age (Hardcover)
As a student of Stuart era British political and social history, I found this work a useful, serious introduction to Dutch economic and art history. Profusely illustrated, and quite readable (despite the intended academic audience), the book uses a detailed study of Dutch economics as a window into the world of Dutch art in the 17th century. A number of sources are translated here for the first time.

Of course, all art history interpretation is necessarily viewed through a personal prism, and Dr. Hochstrasser lets us know she is using a "Marxist" approach (which means that class consciousness is revealed by the art) with her frontispiece quote. For me the narrative made the still lives far more consequential and understandable - I've never been enamored of the pretty fruit type of picture before, but now understand why the subjects were important and why the owners of these works would be proud of their display. I came away with a deeper appreciation for the artwork of the period as well as the economic industry of the Dutch at this time, including the affliction of the slave trade, an odious counterpoint to the "golden age"

This affordable work would be welcomed by anyone with an interest in 17th century Europe, economic history, and Dutch art, of course!
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Still Life and Contemporary Life, January 6, 2010
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This review is from: Still Life and Trade in the Dutch Golden Age (Hardcover)
I found this a lovely, thoughtful, and engrossing book. But before saying more, I want to respond to one of the disparaging reviews, because what irked that reviewer is precisely what I found so compelling and refreshing.

This reviewer whines about the social fabric Hochstrasser notices woven into 17th c Dutch painting. Instead of containing "art criticism," howls the reviewer, the reader gets "shock and horror that Dutch still lifes in the Seventeenth Century do not confess loudly the sins of the Dutch colonial expansion and the underlying exploitation of native peoples arising from such things as the spice trade." Apparently, discussing anything but brush strokes, lighting, the chemistry of paint and other technical aspects are totally out of bounds, and not art criticism. But one objects, these paintings were not created on Mars, but on planet Earth, in a particular time and place. That context influenced what painters saw and how they saw it. In a period that ushered in the first consumer culture, and in a country actively participating in and profiting from the Atlantic slave trade, is it really so outrageous and preposterous to notice that some of those realities influenced the visual art of the period? To me, and I suspect to many people, this would seem a rather obvious point. On the other hand, not paying attention to, but deliberately ignoring, those factors seems the more overt and gross political maneuver. And that is what the grumpy reviewer advocates. But so much for criticizing one huffy critique.

What's more important is Hochstrasser's book! I confess that before reading it, I found Dutch still life utterly boring. Who cares about a close up of some fruit in a bowl, fish on a platter, a goblet of wine, a slice of golden cheese or a mottled tulip? The book makes such scenes pulse with life--where did that lemon come from, after all? What were the conditions that brought the then exotic fruit from the Levant to the banquet table of some hitherto backwater Lowland tavern? The unpeeling rind's silvery patina is so suggestive...And yes, the fact that Gouda cheese and the herring trade were economic boons explains part of why they were so lovingly and mysteriously depicted by the period's painters. Without knowing the social background, one may marvel at some of the bravura painterly techniques, but one misses a lot--and what sponsored those innovative techniques was also a socio-economic affair...

To continue, what about that Arab or African in the background? It turns out that these paintings are deeply social. That's true for all painting, and all art, but in painting so relentlessly focused on objects, it's easy to forget or to ignore the world that spawned those commodities, and to miss what about them so fired the passions of viewers. I for one, learned a lot, and am grateful for such careful, nuanced and deeply informed scholarship.

I think other readers would be similarly intrigued. It's a coffee table book to marvel at, read, discuss, and indeed, to look at the pretty pictures.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Book, December 5, 2011
This review is from: Still Life and Trade in the Dutch Golden Age (Hardcover)
This book is outstanding. Brilliant scholarship and deep observations about art and culture. We highly recommend it.

Charles Taliaferro and Jil Evans
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