In the seventeenth century, Dutch merchants sailed across seas and oceans, joining trade networks that stretched from Asia to the Americas and Africa. This unprecedented movement of goods, ideas, and people gave rise to what many consider the first age of globalization and sparked an artistic boom in the Netherlands. 

Dutch Art in a Global Age brings together paintings by Rembrandt, Frans Hals, Gerrit Dou, Jacob van Ruisdael, Maria Schalcken, and other celebrated artists from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston’s renowned collection. These are joined by four Dutch paintings from the Kimbell’s permanent collection, along with prints, maps, and stunning decorative objects in silver, porcelain, and more, from the seventeenth and the first half of the eighteenth centuries. Exploring how Dutch dominance in international commerce transformed life in the Netherlands and created an extraordinary cultural flourishing, the exhibition also includes new scholarship that contextualizes seventeenth-century Dutch art within the complex histories of colonial expansion, wealth disparity, and the transatlantic slave trade during this period.

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Audio Tour

The audio tour for Dutch Art in a Global Age: Masterpieces from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston  is available only on the Kimbell app for Apple and Android devices. Visitors can purchase the tour access code for $4 online or at the Piano Pavilion ticket desk. Members can receive their free tour access code at the Piano Pavilion ticket desk.

Audio tour by Acoustiguide. 

Purchase the access code

On Display

Virtual Tour

Dutch Art in a Global Age: Masterpieces from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (November 10, 2024–February 9, 2025)

Exhibition Catalogue

Photograph of a catalogue taken in a studio with a grey and black background.

The seventeenth century has long been considered a “golden age” for Dutch art, fueled by the Dutch Republic’s growth as an economic world power. Nourished by an innovative stock market and burgeoning global trade network, this vibrant economy not only provided artists with a rich context in which to make their art, but also directly influenced the art itself—in its subject matter, materials, meaning, and interpretation. The genre scenes and still lifes that today seem quintessentially Dutch actually project a global vision, and often address the positive and the negative of economic and global expansion.

Drawing on the world-renowned collection of Dutch paintings, works on paper, decorative arts, and illustrated books at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, this book offers a fresh look at seventeenth-century Dutch art, accompanied by authoritative essays that ask readers to consider the global context in which this work was made. 

Hardcover; 224 pages; 150 color illustrations

Edited by Christopher D. M. Atkins

Purchase the catalogue

Blue text reads "Center for Netherlandish Art" and black text reads "MFA Boston"

This exhibition is organized by Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts, where art inspires connections. By sharing exhibitions from one of the world’s most renowned collections, the MFA brings people together all across the globe. We invite you to experience the MFA in Boston, online, and around the world.

It is supported in part by Frost, the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the Fort Worth Tourism Public Improvement District.

3 black logos lined up next to each other

Promotional support for the Kimbell Art Museum and its exhibitions is provided by American Airlines, PaperCity, and NBC 5.

Three black logos in a row. The first logo is for American Airlines. The second logo is for NBC5 / Telemundo. The third logo is for Paper City.