
'Rembrandt to Vermeer' exhibition marks Amsterdam's 750th anniversary
The "From Rembrandt to Vermeer, Masterpieces from The Leiden Collection" is on show from Wednesday to August 24 at the H'ART Museum in the city centre.
The museum describes the exhibition as "a unique and intimate glimpse into the 17th-century Netherlands through the eyes of the great Dutch Masters."
Other artists include Frans Hals, Jan Steen, Ferdinand Bol, Gerard Dou and Frans van Mieris.
The exhibition includes the only Vermeer still in private hands - "A Young woman Seated at the Virginals."
The exhibition sketches many facets of Amsterdam life, highlighting everything from food, drink, reading and music to aging, parenting and the art of portraiture and self-portraiture.
It includes character studies of people from various backgrounds, at the market, in the pub or in their homes.
The focus is formed by 17 paintings and one drawing by Rembrandt, who moved to Amsterdam from Leiden in 1630.
The US-French art collector Thomas Kaplan has been fascinated by Rembrandt since childhood and has assembled "The Leiden Collection"in the artist's honour.
The H'ART website notes that the exhibition depicts many women, from wealthy matrons to goddesses to ordinary citizens.
"Particularly noteworthy is the inclusion of a painting by Maria Schalcken, one of the few women in her time known to be working as a painter," it adds. —dpa
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Observer
10 hours ago
- Observer
Ralph Lauren's Vintage Man of Mystery
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With his full beard and ponytail, he may look like an aging hippie or beach bum, but his life has been fairly conventional. He married his high school sweetheart, Kathy and they raised two daughters in Darien, Connecticut. Now they live in the Hamptons full time. As their home makes clear, Bihlmaier has collected not only for his employer, but for himself: the closets are stuffed with vintage chambrays, French work clothes, old flannels, distressed military leather jackets. In the bedroom, dozens of Navajo silver rings and bracelets were arranged on the dresser and the arm of a beat-up leather club chair was piled with early 20th-century Pendleton blankets. Native American rugs of an older vintage covered the floors. Such items are in high demand in today's vintage market, in part because Bihlmaier, through his work with Ralph Lauren, helped popularise them. On the patio over lunch, he talked about how he fell into his singular career. 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To find the stuff to fill the showrooms and stores, he went on shopping excursions to the Brimfield Antique Flea Market in Brimfield, Massachusetts and the Rose Bowl Flea Market in Pasadena, California. The merchandise was plentiful and cheap. 'You'd find the coolest 1920s hunting coat for $20', Bihlmaier said. He worked with another Ralph Lauren employee, Bob Melet and the two of them would hit vintage fairs from Santa Fe to Paris like Vikings, only instead of swords and axes they had business cards and discerning eyes. 'If Doug and I walked into an antique venue, we could eviscerate a show as quickly and with quality as anyone', Melet said. Dealers gave them nicknames. 'They used to call Doug 'Eagle Eye' and me 'Wandering Eye'', Melet added. Bihlmaier, who speaks with deference and caution about his employer, said his taste and Lauren's were 'almost perfectly aligned'. He added that his boss taught him that when hunting, 'mint' wasn't the goal. Rather, scuffs, dents and age made a vintage item special. Lauren also trusted him. 'He told me, 'If you don't want it, I don't want it'', Bihlmaier said. Part of the legend of Bihlmaier is that he recognised the intrinsic style of certain items before others did, and mixed and layered them in novel ways. Hranek, the fashion editor, credits him with pairing American Western with vintage military, citing the combination of a turquoise silver watchband and a Waltham World War II watch — a look that Double RL merchandised. 'It looked as though he did it without effort', Hranek said. 'That is true talent'. — NYT


Observer
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- Observer
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Muscat Daily
16-07-2025
- Muscat Daily
Oman hosts film contest dedicated to Palestine
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