Exploring Dutch Art at the Museum of Fine Arts

This online course will highlight works in the newly opened Center for Netherlandish Art at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Through the remarkable generosity of two Boston families, the museum was greatly enriched by over a hundred paintings and many art objects that present the seventeenth century in the Netherlands (Dutch Republic and Spanish Netherlands) in full. Current research in this field is widening its focus from the obvious artists, including Rembrandt, Rubens, Van Dyck, Dou and others, to the lesser-known artists. The latter include women artists such as Rachel Ruysch, Michaelina Wautier, and Maria Schalcken and highly skilled but less familiar painters such as Jan Porcellis and Pieter Claesz. The multi-faceted art production of this period includes silver, porcelain, and furniture, all of which are well represented at the MFA.

An optional group field trip to the Museum of Fine Arts will be offered in early November, after the last online session.

Class Recordings:

Class 1 - October 12, 2022

Class 2 - October 19, 2022

Class 3 - October 26, 2022

Class 4 - November 2, 2022


Group Leader: AMY GOLAHNY
Venue: online
Meets on: Wednesdays 3:30 to 5:30 pm
Starting: 10/12/2022
Sessions: 4
Class Size: 50
Teaching Style: Lecture and discussion
Weekly Preparation: Optional
Group Leader Biography:

Amy Golahny, Logan A. Richmond Professor of Art History Emerita at Lycoming College, Williamsport, Pennsylvania, has served as president of the Historians of Netherlandish Art and the American Association of Netherlandic Studies.  Her books include Rembrandt’s Reading (Amsterdam University Press, 2003), Rembrandt: Studies in his Varied Appoaches to Italian Art (Brill, 2020), and most recently, a mongraph on Rembrand's Hundred Guilder Print (Lund Humphries).  Her articles have appeared in foremost international  journals. She is adjuct professor at Rhode Island College and gives presentations on European and American art to community groups, collleges and adult audiences.