Painters’ playbooks Deep mapping socio-spatial strategies in the art market of seventeenth-century Amsterdam
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| Award date | 12-09-2023 |
| Number of pages | 315 |
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| Abstract |
The art market in seventeenth-century Amsterdam is often considered a competitive, multi-layered arena in which diverse artists catered to a broad and varied clientele. However, traditional economic and art-historical approaches struggle to fully comprehend this intricate market system. To address this, this dissertation introduces a socio-spatial approach using digital methods to examine the art market and explain the artistic outburst in seventeenth-century Amsterdam. By synthesizing various historical sources digitally, this study analyses artists’ collective behaviour – or ‘playbooks’ – as revealed in their location choices, social relations, and the use of house interiors. This dissertation interprets the art market not as an economic platform but as a socio-spatial phenomenon wherein artists aligned their behaviours with career goals and social and spatial milieu. Interpreting historical data from a socio-spatial perspective, this study argues that the changes in artists’ playbooks both shaped the multi-layered market structure and influenced artistic innovation in seventeenth-century Amsterdam. This dissertation, therefore, offers a behavioural explanation, contrasting traditional economic reasoning, for the creative outburst in the so-called Golden Age of Dutch art.
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| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Language | English |
| Related dataset | Spatial distribution of housing rental value in Amsterdam 1647-1652 |
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