Home | Pages | Archives


More Dogs in Dutch Art

October 3, 2013 11:34 pm

DogLookUpWhat do we really value about our dogs? Blind adoration is the most important thing, if we dog lovers are honest.  Sure, we’d like to see obedience, intelligence, cute tricks, and barking only when fire breaks out or someone is actually breaking into the house.  But that look of pure unconditional love trumps everything else. I imagine that even rich merchants in the Dutch Golden Age had their moments of doubt and insecurity, moments when they needed that adoring upward gaze.

As I wandered the art galleries of Amsterdam, I snapped photos of dogs. They were everywhere, in the Rijksmuseum and in the Amsterdam Museum (which is really the history museum, but the word “history” was recently removed, apparently because it was thought to scare some people away).

iPhone9-23-13 394

Somehow, the dogs featured in paintings serve to make the people depicted seem more real, more like us.

iPhone9-23-13 363Each animal is an individual character, as lovingly painted as any man, woman or child.

iPhone9-23-13 239

 

Each long-ago dog had a name, a favorite place to sleep, a way of looking happy or sad.

iPhone9-23-13 238

We might have trouble imagining the lives of humans from past centuries, but we have no trouble recognizing these dogs. And that adoring upward look still speaks to us, centuries after dog and master are gone. For me, the loving relationship between people and their pets is a kind of window into the past.

iPhone9-23-13 237

Join me next time for more explorations in the art and history of Europe!

Posted by Claudia Suzan Carley

Categories: Amsterdam, Art, History, Netherlands

Tags: , , ,

4 Responses to “More Dogs in Dutch Art”

  1. I agree but never thought about it that way before. People in the paintings seem so very far away, but the pets make them seem much more accessible. Great point.

    By Beth Anne Reed on October 4, 2013 at 2:00 am

    1. Thanks for your comment! It’s interesting that there are many more dogs than cats in paintings…I don’t know why that is.

      By Claudia Suzan Carley on October 14, 2013 at 3:21 pm

      1. Cats are less likely to sit still most likely. Unless they curl up and go to sleep!

        By Beth Anne Reed on October 17, 2013 at 1:33 am

  2. […] about dogs in art are at  https://castlesandcoffeehouses.com/2013/10/01/dogs-in-dutch-art/ ‎and https://castlesandcoffeehouses.com/2013/10/03/more-dogs-in-dutch-art/ […]

    By Happy International Cat Day! | on August 8, 2016 at 5:33 pm

Leave a Reply



Mobile Site | Full Site


Get a free blog at WordPress.com Theme: WordPress Mobile Edition by Alex King.