商人寡妇的沙龙

IF 0.1 0 ARCHITECTURE
Jojanneke Clarijs
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在18世纪中叶,鹿特丹罗特克ade 405-407的所谓的商人之家经历了一次大规模的翻新,形成了现在的立面、楼梯和一楼装饰绘画的接待室。这些画作的图像提出了关于它们的意义、创作者和客户的问题。为了阐明艺术方案,本文考察了住宅、画家、业主和政治经济背景。研究提供了深入了解绘画的深层含义,同时也增加了我们对这一时期鹿特丹中产阶级建筑和国内文化的了解。这座房子主要建于1718年至1735年之间,具有典型的鹿特丹商人住宅的布局,商业运营在街道上,居住空间在上面的楼层。1756年,前立面被重建。在同一时期,还安装了洛可可风格的楼梯,并创建了一个优雅的接待室,也是洛可可风格的。在这里可以找到艺术品——一幅壁炉架上的画和一幅天花板上的画。壁炉架上的这幅画是对忠诚和谨慎美德的寓言。天花板上的画由四个角落的画面组成,描绘了四大洲的人格化,中央的画面描绘了贸易和自由的人格化,以及胜利、富足、和平和慷慨的综合人格化。图像部分来源于Cesare Ripa和Hubert Poot的徽章书籍。它们既没有签名也没有日期。与德克·安东尼·毕肖普(1708-1785)的两幅画在风格和图像上的相似性表明,这位艺术家也对库普曼水馆的画作负责。毕肖普制作了装饰艺术品、油画、地形图、纹章和家谱,并装饰了马车和珠宝。他的一些作品展示了与库普曼水图中发现的相同的特殊的图像。毕肖普是一位备受尊敬的画家,他的客户包括许多显赫的家庭。这些绘画和洛可可风格的内饰是在抗议派商人安东内塔·韦坎滕(Antonetta Verkanten, 1702-1774)的授意下完成的。她从事茶叶、咖啡、羊毛和毛皮的贸易,这些产品部分来自荷兰殖民地。新的内饰反映了她日益增长的财富和社会野心。这些画作的主题不仅仅是指Verkanten的商业活动,而且还受到当代国际,政治和经济对商业的威胁的影响,例如七年战争和海外贸易的国际竞争。在此基础上,这幅天花板画可以解释为洲际自由贸易的寓言,以及为了贸易繁荣和繁荣而呼吁和平的呼吁。它还鼓励分享由此产生的丰富。这本书中描述的美德对商业的成功至关重要。绘画和室内装饰表明,不仅是精英阶层,富裕的中产阶级也委托按照最新时尚布置并装饰有寓意人物的优雅沙龙。整体表达了客户的经济地位、野心和想法。画家毕肖普拥有以独特的图像来传达信息的智慧。像Koopmanshuis这样的画作,如果不了解它们的背景,就很难理解,但它们既有趣,又与荷兰装饰画的历史有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A merchant widow’s salon
In the middle of the eighteenth century, the so-called Koopmanshuis (Merchant’s House) at Rechter Rottekade 405-407 in Rotterdam underwent a substantial renovation that resulted in the present facade, staircase, and first-floor reception room with decorative paintings. The iconography of the paintings raises questions about their meaning, maker and client. In order to elucidate the artistic programme this article investigates the house, the painter, the client and the political-economic context. The research provides insight into the deeper meaning of the paintings while also increasing our knowledge of Rotterdam’s middle-class architectural and domestic culture in this period. Built largely in the period 1718-1735, the house has the typical layout of Rotterdam merchant houses, with business operations at street level and living spaces on the floors above. In 1756 the front elevation was rebuilt. The same period saw the installation of a rococo staircase and the creation of an elegant reception room, also in rococo style. It is here that the artworks – an overmantel painting and a ceiling painting – are to be found. The overmantel painting is an allegory on the virtues of Fidelity and Prudence. The ceiling painting consists of four corner tableaus depicting personifications of the four continents and a central  tableau featuring personifications of Trade and Freedom and a composite personification of Victory, Plenty, Peace and Munificence. The iconography is derived in part from the emblem books of Cesare Ripa and Hubert Poot. They are neither signed nor dated. Stylistic and iconographic similarities with two paintings by Dirk Anthony Bisschop (1708-1785) suggest that this artist was also responsible for the paintings in the Koopmanshuis. Bisschop made decorative artworks, paintings, topographical drawings, armorials and family trees, and decorated carriages and jewellery. Several of his works display the same idiosyncratic kind of iconography as found in the Koopmanshuis. Bisschop was a highly regarded painter whose clients included many prominent families. The paintings and the rococo interior were done at the behest of the Remonstrant merchant Antonetta Verkanten (1702-1774). She traded in tea, coffee, wool and furs, products sourced in part from the Dutch colonies. The new interior was a reflection of her growing affluence and social ambitions. The subject matter of the paintings refers not just to Verkanten’s commercial activities, but was also influenced by contemporary international, political and economic threats to commerce, such as the Seven Years’ War and international competition in overseas trade. Based on this, the ceiling painting can be interpreted as an allegory of intercontinental free trade,  and an appeal for peace in order that trade might flourish and generate prosperity. It also encourages the sharing of the resulting abundance. The virtues depicted in the overmantel work are crucial to successful commerce. The paintings and the interior demonstrate that it was not just the elite, but also the well-to-do middle class who commissioned elegant salons furnished in accordance with the latest fashion and decorated with allegorical figurations. The totality expressed the economic position, ambitions and ideas of the client. The painter, Bisschop, possessed the intellectual capacity to render the message in a unique iconography. Paintings like those in the Koopmanshuis, which can be difficult to interpret without knowing their background, are both interesting and relevant to the history of Dutch decorative painting.
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来源期刊
Bulletin KNOB
Bulletin KNOB ARCHITECTURE-
CiteScore
0.50
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21
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12 weeks
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