Regular guided tour: In golden light
For many centuries, Italy, with its abundance of art and culture and mild climate, has attracted artists from other, particularly northern, countries. In the 17th century, these included many Dutch and Flemish artists, several generations of whom travelled to Italian cities and landscapes, preferably Rome and the surrounding countryside, to live and paint there, at least for a time. From around 1640, some of them specialised in landscape painting, which had been popular as an independent genre since around 1600, including Jan Both, Adam Pynacker, and Jan Asselijn. The artists organised themselves into local communities, the best known of which were the Roman Bentvueghels (flock of birds). Their member Pieter Bodding van Laer gathered the group of Bamboccianti around him. After returning to the Netherlands, they quickly became successful, because their works stood out from the Dutch, Nordic-cool landscapes or the rather gloomy genre scenes. The exhibition offers a rare opportunity to see works by all the main representatives of the long-neglected Dutch Italianate school in relation to one another. The paintings are part of a private collection in Luxembourg and have never been exhibited in public before.
Where does it take place?
Villa Vauban
18 Avenue Emile Reuter
2420 Luxembourg
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