Innovative Exuberance: Fluctuations in the Painting Production in the 17th-Century Netherlands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Data on Painting Production
3. A Probability Approach to Account for Uncertainties
4. Production Trend Visualized
5. Becoming a Painter: Expectation and Risk
5.1. Painting as a Promising Profession
5.2. Painting as a Risky Business
5.3. Decisions under Risk and Uncertainty
6. Collective Enthusiasm and Wide-Spread Endorsement
7. Art Market as a “Social Bubble”
8. Exuberant Innovation
9. Conclusion
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | RKDimages, contained 55,718 unique paintings in the dataset acquired via the RKD public API, accessed February 2018. |
2 | The low-quality paintings, such as “works-by-the-dozen” (dosijnwerck) had a much lower survival rate than those of Rembrandt or Vermeer and are thus under-represented in the modern database. Jager (2016) lifts the curtain to the lower segment of the art market for which the “works-by-the-dozen” were produced. Yet, the inventories of few art dealers can hardly be a representative sample to quantify the degree of distortion in the RKD database. |
3 | Cf. (Van der Woude 1991; Montias 1990; De Marchi and Van Miegroet 2006, 2014; Rasterhoff 2017, etc.) |
4 | However, there is no thorough survey of all archival inventories, and the majority of known inventories were collected to suit art historical interests and are biased towards the collections of the wealthy with more works of art in the few large cities. The inventories in the Getty Provenance Index only has inventories from Amsterdam, Haarlem, Utrecht, Leiden, and Delft with a focus on the inventories in Amsterdam. As a result, they cannot truly reflect the collecting pattern of the whole society and are therefore also a biased sample (Montias 1996). |
5 | The categorization of genres in this study follows the main genre described in the RKD database. For example, a landscape with the staffage figures embodying a religious lesson is still regarded as landscape instead of history painting. |
6 | 96.6% of paintings in the RKDimages have size recorded in the dataset. The loss of data due to the change of measurements is thus negligible. |
7 | Cf. Hadrianus Junius, Batavia, Leiden, 1589 (the first city description in which painters were included as “famous sons” of the city); J.I. Pontanus, Historische beschrijvinghe der seer wijt beroemde coop-stad Amsterdam, Amsterdam 1614; Jan Orlers, Beschrijvinge der stad Leyden, Leiden 1641. Preacher Samuel Ampzing and theologian Schrevelius wrote in 1628 and 1648 respectively the praise for the city of Haarlem with several laudatory poems dedicated to painters. |
8 | Angel went as far as saying: “I win a lot of money, [as] I make large paintings.” (Ick winne machtich gelt, ick maecke groote stucken). See (Angel 1642, pp. 28–29). Mentioned in (De Marchi and Van Miegroet 1994). |
9 | More prominent painters (A++, A+ samples according to Rasterhoff’s categorization) were born around 1590–1630, entering the market around the first decades of the 17th century (Rasterhoff 2017, p. 206, Figure 7.4). |
10 | An artist-painter (kunstschilder) was often literate and had attended school full-time for three years. After this initial investment in basic education, for which Montias has estimated an accumulated expense of fl. 150 to fl. 200, aspiring artists had to invest in an apprenticeship period. Some pupils finished their training with a trip to Italy at a considerable cost, which was often a privilege of the pupils from affluent families. For basic education see (De Jager 1990; Boers-Goosens 2001, p. 87). And for painting apprenticeships, see (Montias 1982, p. 169). For the entry barriers for artist, see (Rasterhoff 2017, p. 232). See also (Bok 1994, pp. 53–97). |
11 | See ECARTICO for numerous cases for pupils of masters of whom we do not know their works. |
12 | Jan Porcellis, Jan van Goyen, Frans Hals, Jan Steen, Hercules Seghers, Pieter de Hooch, Vermeer and Rembrandt have been found taking debts. See (Rasterhoff 2017, p. 237). |
13 | There are a handful of examples of such contracts. Just to name a few: In 1625, for instance, painter Jacques de Ville decided upon delivering fl. 2400 worth of paintings over the course of a year and a half to skipper Hans Melchiorsz; in 1641, art dealer Leendert Volmarijn is known to have ordered thirteen pictures from Isaac van Ostade; art dealer Joris de Wijs contracted with Emanuel de Witte to paint for fl. 800 a year plus room and board (Montias 1988, pp. 65–66; Montias 1987, p. 99; Bredius 1891, pp. 56–57). |
14 | Samuel van Hoogstraten told the tale of Hercules Pietersz Seghers that Seghers sold a copperplate to an art dealer for very little money. The dealer, “after having printed a few copies from his plate he cut it into pieces, saying that the time would come that collectors would pay for one copy four times as much he had asked for the whole plate, which actually did happen because each print later bourught sxteen ducat, […] but poor Hercules did not get any of this” (Hoogstraten 1678, p. 312). Translation is taken from (Haverkamp-Begemann 1968, p. 8). |
15 | Existing studies use extensive data on the price of painting in auctions and sales across time to develop a price index to identify abnormal bumps in the price index. However, collecting large and representative 17th century price data of Dutch paintings is almost impossible as most sales of paintings do not have records. Most of the price information of paintings are from probate inventories and contracts: the former can hardly represent the sale price and the latter is too small to be representative. For these reasons, this research will limit its scope to the social bubble without claiming a speculative bubble in the 17th-century Dutch art market. |
16 |
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Li, W. Innovative Exuberance: Fluctuations in the Painting Production in the 17th-Century Netherlands. Arts 2019, 8, 72. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts8020072
Li W. Innovative Exuberance: Fluctuations in the Painting Production in the 17th-Century Netherlands. Arts. 2019; 8(2):72. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts8020072
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Weixuan. 2019. "Innovative Exuberance: Fluctuations in the Painting Production in the 17th-Century Netherlands" Arts 8, no. 2: 72. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts8020072