The New Amsterdam History Center (NAHC) brings its expanded “Mapping Early New York” 3D digital installation back to the New York Historical, enhancing the major exhibition Old Masters, New Amsterdam, curated by Russell Shorto, on view May 1–August 30, 2026.
Four hundred years ago, the Dutch established New Amsterdam on Manhattan Island. At the same time in Europe, artists such as Rembrandt van Rijn, Frans Hals, and Jan Steen were painting vivid scenes of everyday life. This exhibition brings those worlds together, pairing Dutch paintings with an immersive 3D digital reconstruction of the city that would become New York.
An Interactive Window into 1660 Manhattan
The exhibition seamlessly blends fine art with cutting-edge digital scholarship. It invites visitors to use an interactive touchscreen to explore a detailed 3D model of the city’s 1660 Castello Plan. Streets, homes, gardens, public buildings, and centers of trade come vividly to life, inspired by the 17th-century Dutch paintings on view.
New interior reconstructions of the Kierstede House offer a closer look at daily life in a prominent New Amsterdam household that also served as an apothecary. Here lived Sara Kierstede, a tradeswoman and interpreter who spoke Algonkian languages and moved between Indigenous and European communities. The model also includes enslaved African and Indigenous people, reflecting their likely presence in the household. Visitors can also explore the Indian Trading House, a key place of exchange between Indigenous traders and European settlers.
For more information
contact Vanessa Bezemer Sellers, PhD, Director of the Mapping Early New York Project: vanessa.b.sellers@gmail.com