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Europe 1300 - 1800
Course: Europe 1300 - 1800 > Unit 9
Lesson 4: Dutch Republic- Model of the Dutch East India Company ship "Valkenisse"
- The Dutch art market in the 17th century
- Why make a self portrait?
- A Dutch doll house
- Van Mander, Het Schilder-Boeck
- Frederiks Andries, Covered coconut cup
- Osias Beert, Still Life with Various Vessels on a Table
- Anthony van Dyck, Self-Portrait as Icarus with Daedalus
- Saenredam, Interior of Saint Bavo, Haarlem
- Hals, Singing Boy with Flute
- Hals, Malle Babbe
- Frans Hals, The Women Regents
- Willem Claesz. Heda, Still Life with Glasses and Tobacco
- Rembrandt, The Artist in His Studio
- Rembrandt, The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp
- Rembrandt, The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp
- Rembrandt, The Night Watch
- Rembrandt, The Night Watch
- Rembrandt, Self-Portrait with Saskia
- Rembrandt, Girl at a Window
- Rembrandt, Aristotle with a Bust of Homer
- Rembrandt, Aristotle with a Bust of Homer
- Rembrandt, Christ Crucified between the Two Thieves: The Three Crosses.
- Rembrandt, Bathsheba at her Bath
- Rembrandt, Abraham Francen
- Rembrandt, Self-Portrait
- Rembrandt, Self-Portrait with Two Circles
- Rembrandt, The Jewish Bride
- Rembrandt, Christ Preaching (Hundred Guilder Print)
- Is it a genuine Rembrandt?
- Judith Leyster, The Proposition
- Judith Leyster, Self-Portrait
- Early Dutch Torah Finials
- Michaelina Wautier, The Five Senses
- Willem Kalf, Still Life with a Silver Ewer
- Gerrit Dou, A Woman Playing a Clavichord
- Vermeer, The Glass of Wine
- Vermeer, Young Woman with a Water Pitcher
- Johannes Vermeer, Woman Holding a Balance
- Vermeer, Woman Holding a Balance
- Johannes Vermeer, Girl with a Pearl Earring
- Johannes Vermeer, The Art of Painting
- Jan Steen, Feast of St. Nicholas
- Ruisdael, View of Haarlem with Bleaching Grounds
- Jacob van Ruisdael, The Jewish Cemetery
- Andries Beeckman, The Castle of Batavia and Dutch colonialism
- Frans Post, Landscape with Ruins in Olinda
- Rachel Ruysch, Fruit and Insects
- Rachel Ruysch, Fruit and Insects
- Rachel Ruysch, Flower Still-Life
- Van Huysum, Vase with Flowers
- Conserving van Walscapelle's Flowers in a Glass Vase
- The Great Atlas, Dutch edition
- The Town Hall of Amsterdam
- Huis ten Bosch (House in the Woods)
- 17th century Delftware
- Baroque art in Holland
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Frederiks Andries, Covered coconut cup
Frederiks Andries, Covered coconut cup, 1607 (Amsterdam), silver, coconut, 34.5 x 22.9 x 12.7 cm (gift of Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo, in honor of Thomas S. Michie, and in support of the Center for Netherlandish Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
speakers: Courtney Harris, Assistant Curator, Decorative Arts and Sculpture, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
Video transcript
(upbeat music) - [Narrator One] We're in
the Museum of Fine Arts, and we're looking at
a Covered Coconut Cup. Although that name does not do justice to the fabulous object
that we're looking at. - [Narrator Two] We have this coconut at the center of this cup,
and it's surrounded by silver that has been chased
and engraved and cast, and it celebrates the coconut and creates this enveloping
silver shiny surround. - [Narrator One] In theory, you
could put liquids inside it, the top comes off. - [Narrator Two] It is
removable and inside you can see the inner shell of the coconut. If you peek through you can
see that the spout is open and if there were liquid inside of it, you would have been able to pour it. But an object like this
probably was so special to its owner that they wouldn't have dared put anything inside of it. - [Narrator One] We can go to the store and buy all sorts of coconut products, but here the coconut is
lovingly and lavishly encased in this very precious material. - [Narrator Two] At the
time when this was made in the 17th century in Amsterdam, coconuts would have
been relatively unusual. They were starting to be
imported into the Netherlands by the Dutch East India company. We know that an East India company ship had a number of
coconuts from Indonesia on it in the early 17th century. And so the silversmith of this piece, Frederiks Andrise may have
seen this coconut in Amsterdam and perhaps a wealthy patron requested that he create this incredible
silver mount for it, and it combines both this
exotic good from overseas with wonderful craftsmanship
at home in Amsterdam. - [Narrator One] So much to see, what I immediately notice is this fish that seems precariously
balanced on two shells carried by a mermaid,
what a fantastic thing? - [Narrator Two] All of
the imagery in this piece speaks to the see, from the top with Neptune with his trident all the way to the four feet which are tiny tortoises or turtles, between that is the mermaid
who sits on a sea creature. Then she's on top of this undulating base that has shells and waves, and it's almost as though the
ocean is in movement in silver and that's appropriate for
a material like silver, which is a liquid material in some senses. - [Narrator One] And Amsterdam
and the Dutch provinces are making enormous fortunes from the sea, from trading, from ships. - [Narrator Two] It's a very
appropriate subject matter for a piece like this with a material that has clearly come to
the Netherlands on a ship, the coconut itself. And it is extraordinary to be able to know that this was made in 1607 by a specific silversmith and Amsterdam. It has a small mark on it that identifies it as coming
from the city of Amsterdam, another mark that
identifies the year 1607, and a third mark that associates it with the silversmith Frederiks Andries. - [Narrator One] They're
such a contrast to me between the smooth fluid
silver on mermaid and or torso, which is so beautifully modeled and then the very
different color and texture of the coconut, where you can see that the cover has engraved in the scales of this imaginary fish
that has fabulous fins and this amazingly
animated energized tail. - [Narrator Two] There's
a beautiful contrast between the dark, deep,
rich color of the coconut, and then this shiny silver. - [Narrator One] And
then carved on the front, we can see the artist made
use of the natural holes in the coconut for the eyes, and then some carving around
the mouth of the fish, and then from the mouth of the
fish comes this trumpet form and then a face, open mouth, and another trumpet
that emerges from that. And that reminds me of a style that we call kwab or auricular where often we see one form
emerging out of another, the sense of organic growth. - [Narrator Two] Auricular
style in the Netherlands was becoming the main style in silver. It was particularly practiced by the Van Vianen family in Utrecht. And this piece I think is a ocean or sea expression of that style, where you see natural
forms being manipulated, and it's very odd and slightly unsettling, which is what I think
makes it so appealing and so attractive, we almost
can't look away from it. - [Narrator One] And that
monkey perched at the very top, just below the God Neptune
who's striding forward launching his trident, and there's something
so playful about this. We can imagine that this was admired, it was taken out of it likely
a Cabinet of Curiosities, also called Kunstkammer, a place where the wealthy could
display beautiful objects, exotic objects, take them out,
talk about them, share them. - [Narrator Two] This is
the perfect expression of a Kunstkammer object because it combines the natural world and the artificial world. The incredible virtuosity
of the silversmith, which is transforming something that once grew on this earth, that is the Kunstkammer in a nutshell. And what you say about manipulating it and enjoying it with fellow
collectors or on your own, it's an object that really
needs to be looked at in the round. It has almost no front, so you are invited to circulate around it, to manipulate it, to move it, and in a way it creates the fluidity that is within this
watery creature itself. (upbeat music)