Contents
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Esmée Quodbach
Introduction: A Taste for Dutch Art
Peter C. Sutton
Part I
The Early Years: The Formation of America’s Taste for Dutch Art
1 “Pictures chiefly painted in oils, on boards”: Dutch Paintings in Colonial New York
Louisa Wood Ruby
2 Robert Gilmor, Jr.’s “Real” Dutch Paintings
Lance Humphries
3 Collecting Old Dutch Masters: Originals, Interpretations, Copies, and Reproductions
Annette Stott
4 Wilhelm von Bode and Collecting in America
Catherine B. Scallen
Part II
The Gilded Age: Great Collections and Collectors of Seventeenth-Century Dutch Art
5 Golden Age Paintings in the Gilded Age: New York Collectors and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1870–1920
Walter Liedtke
6 “They leave us as they find us, they never elevate”: John G. Johnson and the Dutch Masters
Lloyd DeWitt
7 Collecting Vermeer, 1887–1919
Esmée Quodbach
8 Collecting Dutch Paintings in Boston
Ronni Baer
9 The Dutch Painting Collection at the National Gallery of Art
Arthur K. Wheelock, Jr.
Part III
The Twentieth Century: The Dissemination of Dutch Art Across America and the Dutch Reaction
10 The Passionate Eye of W. R. Valentiner: Shaping the Canon of Dutch Painting in America
Dennis P. Weller
11 Unexpected Rivals for the Dutch: Competing with the Americans for Holland’s National Heritage in Great Britain and Elsewhere
Peter Hecht
12 Golden Opportunities: Collecting Rembrandt in Southern California
Anne T. Woollett
13 Has the Great Age of Collecting Dutch Old Master Paintings Come to an End?
Quentin Buvelot
References
List of Contributors
Index