Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art / Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 74 (2024).
Women: Female Roles in Art and Society of the Netherlands, 1500–1950.
Edited by Thijs Weststeijn, Elizabeth Honig and Judith Noorman.
Long overdue in the history of the Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art, this volume foregrounds women as creators, patrons, buyers, and agents of change in the arts of the Low Countries. Venturing beyond the participation of ‘exceptional’ individuals, chapters investigate how women produced paintings, sculptures, scientific illustrations, and tapestries as well as their role in architectural patronage and personalized art collections. Teasing out a variety of socio-economic, legal, institutional, and art-theoretical dimensions of female agency, the volume highlights the role of visual culture in women’s lived experience and self-representation, asking to what extent women challenged, subverted, or confirmed societal norms in the Netherlands.
Publication date is listed by Brill as 20 November, 2024. Read more here.
Table of Contents:
Open Access: Introduction
Open Access: Dynamic Partnership: The Work of Married Women in Dutch Seventeenth-Century Artists’ Households
Marleen Puyenbroek
The Sculptor and the Sculptress: Gendering Sculpture Production in the Early Modern Low Countries
Elizabeth Rice Mattison
The Images and the Interventions of Adriana Perez in the Rockox Collection
Kendra Grimmett
Open Access: Household Heroines: Maria van Nesse’s Memory-Book and the Interplay between the Art Market and Household Consumption
Judith Noorman
Weaving a Business: Clara de Hont’s (1664–1751) Tapestry Workshop in Amsterdam
Rudy Jos Beerens
Situational Awareness and Practices of Exchange in the Art of Johanna Helena Herolt and
Alida Withoos
Catherine Powell-Warren
Cultivating a Female Presence in the Early Eighteenth-Century Learned Community: The Printed Portraits of Maria de Wilde (1682–1729)
Lieke van Deinsen
Unmarried, Married, Widowed and Dead: Female Patrons of Architecture in Amsterdam (1680–1800)
Pieter Vlaardingerbroek
Caretaker of a Collection: The Case of Jo van Bilderbeek-Lamaison
Bert-Jaap Koops
We Could Hardly Refuse Them: Alida Pott and the Women of De Ploeg, 1918–1931
Anneke de Vries
More information about the series can be found at brill.com/nkj