Coverbild Dutch Drawings in Swedish Public Collections
Dutch Drawings in Swedish Public Collections
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Edited by: Nationalmuseum Stockholm
Foreword: Martin Olin
Texts by: Börje Magnusson
Graphic Design: Hans Cogne
Institution: Nationalmuseum Stockholm
Artist: Abraham Bloemart, Rembrandt, Herman Saftleven, Willem van de Velde, Jan van Goyen
English
March 2018 , 324 Pages
clothbound
288mm x 224mm
ISBN: 978-3-7757-4325-9
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| From Rembrandt to Van de Velde: drawings by Dutch masters
The Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, holds the most extensive collection of Dutch master drawings in Sweden. It comprises important works by Rembrandt and his pupils, as well as drawings by Abraham Bloemart, Jan van Goyen, Herman Saftleven, Willem van de Velde and many other artists. Although trade contacts between the Netherlands and Sweden were lively in the seventeenth century, they account for only a small part of the collection. The bulk of the drawings was acquired by Swedish collectors in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Foremost among them was Count Carl Gustaf Tessin, whose acquisitions at the 1741 Paris sale of the financier Pierre Crozat make up the core of the collection.This catalogue, the result of a long-term research project, includes almost 600 drawings, of which approximately 130 are previously unpublished. Besides the Nationalmuseum, it draws on the collections of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm, The Gothenburg Museum of Art, the Uppsala University Library and other institutions.The NATIONALMUSEUM STOCKHOLM holds the most extensive collection of Dutch master drawings in Sweden. It comprises important works by Rembrandt and his pupils, as well as drawings by Abraham Bloemart, Jan van Goyen, Herman Saftleven, Willem van de Velde and many other artists. Although trade contacts between the Netherlands and Sweden were lively in the seventeenth century, they account for only a small part of the collection. The bulk of the drawings was acquired by Swedish collectors in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Foremost among them was Count Carl Gustaf Tessin, whose acquisitions at the 1741 Paris sale of the financier Pierre Crozat make up the core of the collection.
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