Transforming the Landscape in Early Modern Dutch Art in Baltimore
January 30 2025

Picture: Baltimore Museum of Art
Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:
The Baltimore Museum of Art are due to open their latest exhibition next month entitled Watershed: Transforming the Landscape in Early Modern Dutch Art.
According to their website:
A selection of approximately 40 paintings, prints, and drawings from the BMA’s collection explores the role of water and landscape in defining the early modern Dutch Republic.
The water’s edge was a site of rich and often fraught ideas, where environmental, economic, political, and social narratives came to the fore. It also served as a site of immense inspiration for Dutch artists such as Frans Hals, Rembrandt van Rijn, Jacob van Ruisdael, and Salomon Van Ruysdael, among many others. Landscapes depicting harbors, trade, travel, and leisure abounded, as did the production of maps, still lifes, and portraits. Together, these images offer insight into the identity of the young Dutch Republic.
Presented as part of the Turn Again to the Earth environmental initiative.
The show will run from 9th February until 27th July 2025.