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Seller's Description:
Fine in fine dust jacket. Sewn binding. Cloth over boards. 336 p. Contains: Illustrations. Studies in Netherlandish Art and Cultural History, 1. Audience: General/trade.
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Seller's Description:
Fine in Near Fine jacket. 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" (NETH) Presumed 1st edition. No markings, tiny bump to top corner of front cover, Fine in Near Fine dust jacket with very light rubbing to gloss of rear panel of Dj. Hardcover, 366pp, index, 187 B&W illus. From the dust jacket: The Dutch painter Jan Steen (1626-1679) has long enjoyed a reputation for his dissolute life, redeemed only by a keen eye for the follies of his contemporaries and an exquisite ability to capture his observations in paint. Steen's paintings of unruly households, rambunctious revels, and wily seductresses have come to define our image of the delicious and immoral excesses of the Golden Age. But rather than simply recording the illicit pleasures of Dutch burghers and peasants, Steen transformed them into ambitious genre paintings that rival the peasant epics of Bruegel the Elder and jest with the genteel idylls of Vermeer and Terborch. By placing Steen within Dutch society and culture of the seventeenth century, Mariet Westermann shows how the contradictions and parallels between his life and his art were essential to his innovative achievements. (3.0 JM HOJ 304/1.