TY - CHAP
T1 - A Taste for Fish: Paintings of Aquatic Animals in the Low Countries (1560–1729)
AU - Rijks, Marlise
PY - 2024/1/1
Y1 - 2024/1/1
N2 - This chapter discusses paintings of aquatic animals in the early modern Low Countries, including still lifes, market scenes, scenes of fishing and fishery, and biblical scenes with fish. Based upon evidence from probate inventories, the ownership of ‘fish paintings’ in seventeenth-century Antwerp, Amsterdam, and Haarlem is investigated and compared. Inventories reveal how the language to describe paintings changed over time and how more or less fixed genres only slowly developed. Through the example of fish paintings, this chapter reflects upon early modern genres of images and their meanings. The rise and popularity of fish paintings in the early modern Low Countries is related to the local importance of fishery, the culture of collecting, and the (up and coming) natural knowledge about fish. Fish was an important part of the local economy and diet, whilst aquatic collectables (e.g. dried fish, shells, corals, turtle shells) were keenly collected. The interest in natural history among relatively large parts of the population may have been one factor that explains the popularity of fish motifs in painting. It probably also worked the other way around: fish motifs in painting may have further spurred the interest in nature.
AB - This chapter discusses paintings of aquatic animals in the early modern Low Countries, including still lifes, market scenes, scenes of fishing and fishery, and biblical scenes with fish. Based upon evidence from probate inventories, the ownership of ‘fish paintings’ in seventeenth-century Antwerp, Amsterdam, and Haarlem is investigated and compared. Inventories reveal how the language to describe paintings changed over time and how more or less fixed genres only slowly developed. Through the example of fish paintings, this chapter reflects upon early modern genres of images and their meanings. The rise and popularity of fish paintings in the early modern Low Countries is related to the local importance of fishery, the culture of collecting, and the (up and coming) natural knowledge about fish. Fish was an important part of the local economy and diet, whilst aquatic collectables (e.g. dried fish, shells, corals, turtle shells) were keenly collected. The interest in natural history among relatively large parts of the population may have been one factor that explains the popularity of fish motifs in painting. It probably also worked the other way around: fish motifs in painting may have further spurred the interest in nature.
KW - Natural History
KW - Painting
KW - Art History (17th century)
KW - collections
KW - Low countries
KW - early modern
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004681187_009
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85219692075&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1163/9789004681187_009
DO - 10.1163/9789004681187_009
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9789004681187
SN - 9789004681170
T3 - Intersections
SP - 259
EP - 297
BT - Ichthyology in Context (1500–1880)
PB - Brill
ER -