The Dutch in the Americas, FREE Art History Lecture

Arts & Culture

With footholds in North America, the Caribbean, South America, and along the west coast of Africa, the Dutch played a vital, yet understudied role in the early modern Americas. Via the West India Company’s transatlantic traffic in raw materials (beaver pelts, pearls, sugar, gold), refined artistic products, and people (both willing settlers and enslaved laborers), the Dutch not only extracted desirable goods and materials, but imported and contributed to varied visual and material cultures of mapping and navigation, enslavement, plantation economies, architecture and city planning across North and South America, from what is now New York to North East Brazil. The “Dutch” in the Americas were not a uniform population but included French Huguenots, Swedes, Sephardic Jews, allied Indigenous groups and enslaved Africans. Outlining how the Dutch colonial project in the Americas both diverged and overlapped with their competitors, this talk considers the central role these “Dutch” artists, artworks and material goods played in the Americas, presenting an alternate view of the colonial Americas. 

This program is supported by the Bader Legacy Fund and is in partnership with Agnes Etherington Art Centre, in annual recognition of Bader Day on November 15th.

This event will be in person and live-streamed.

Bader Lecture for Visit Kingston

Event details

When

November 15, 2024 • 6 pm

Where

Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts

390 King Steet West 613-533-2424 https://www.queensu.ca/theisabel/

Language

English

Tickets