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Slavery and the Invention of Dutch Art
A01=Caroline Fowler
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Author_Caroline Fowler
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Black feminism
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AC
Category=AGA
Category=HBTQ
Category=JP
Category=NHD
Category=NHTQ
Category=NHTS
COP=United States
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Dutch painting
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eq_history
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Frans Post
Hercules Segers
Hugo Grotius
Jacob van Heemskerck
Language_English
Lucille Clifton
Maria Sibylla Merian
maritime painting
naval monument
NourbeSe Philip
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Price_€100 and above
PS=Forthcoming
racial capitalism
Reformation
Rembrandt van Rijn
slavery
softlaunch
trans-Atlantic
Vermeer
Product details
- ISBN 9781478028093
- Weight: 408g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 07 Jan 2025
- Publisher: Duke University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
- Language: English
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In Slavery and the Invention of Dutch Art, Caroline Fowler examines the fundamental role of the transatlantic slave trade in the production and evolution of seventeenth-century Dutch art. Whereas the sixteenth-century image debates in Europe engaged with crises around the representation of divinity, Fowler argues that the rise of the transatlantic slave trade created a visual field of uncertainty around picturing the transformation of life into property. Fowler demonstrates how the emergence of landscape, maritime, and botanical painting were deeply intertwined with slavery’s economic expansion. Moreover, she considers how the development of one of the first art markets was inextricable from the trade in human lives as chattel property. Reading seventeenth-century legal theory, natural history, inventories, and political pamphlets alongside contemporary poetry, theory, and philosophy from Black feminism and the African diaspora, Fowler demonstrates that ideas about property, personhood, and citizenship were central to the oeuvres of artists such as Rembrandt van Rijn, Hercules Segers, Frans Post, Johannes Vermeer, and Maria Sibylla Merian and therefore inescapably within slavery’s grasp.
Caroline Fowler is Starr Director of the Research and Academic Program at the Clark Institute. She is the author of The Art of Paper: From the Holy Land to the Americas and Drawing and the Senses: An Early Modern History.
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