Skip to Content
Stanford University
Home
SEARCH
SEARCH WEBSITE
  • Visit
  • Exhibitions
  • Programs
  • Collection
  • Students & Faculty
  • About
  • Support
  • Browse
  • Currently On View
  • Outdoor Sculptures
  • Advanced Search

Studio, Shop, Cabinet, Gallery: Spaces for Experiencing Art in Europe, 1600-1800

<div class="col-lg-6 col-md-6 col-sm-12">Even before public and private art museums proliferated in Europe during the 19th century, artists illustrated the sites where art was made, exhibited, and sold. They reacted to the popularity of emerging public venues for art, and the excitement these sites generated about seeing, discussing, and collecting art. Beyond the familiar and visually rich subject of the artist’s studio, artists explored the academy’s exhibition spaces and classrooms, the auction house, commercial galleries, and the collector’s cabinet. Some draftsmen faithfully rendered these spaces, recording the details and interactions of an art world that was rapidly expanding and becoming increasingly international. In contrast, others used these places as the premise for a fantasy picture or a symbolic meditation on the greater significance of art production and appreciation.</div> <div class="col-lg-6 col-md-6 col-sm-12">The emergence of more new spaces for art had broad economic and social implications. Consequently, within this genre of images, great attention was paid to depictions of both artists and collectors. The images featured here consistently present artists as worthy of respect, emphasizing that they worked with their minds and not just with their skilled hands. They often appear dressed like wealthy gentleman, not lowly workers sullied by paint, printer’s ink, or dust. Connoisseurs are depicted as worldly brokers of cultural influence—or satirized as fools who squint at details rather than appreciate the entire work as the artist had intended. <em>Elizabeth Kathleen Mitchell, PhD, Burton and Deedee McMurtry Curator, and Director of the Curatorial Fellowship Program</em></div>

Showing 1 of 1


  FILTER RESULTS
Image of The Connoisseur and Tired Boy

The Connoisseur and Tired Boy
Dawe, Philip


Your current search criteria is: Portfolio is "Studio, Shop, Cabinet, Gallery: Spaces for Experiencing Art in Europe, 1600-1800" and [Object]Artist-Display Name is "Philip Dawe".






Last updated: 02/26/2021


This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced.

The Cantor Arts Center encourages the use of images found on this website for personal, noncommercial use, including educational and scholarly purposes. Some images may be protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights.

To purchase a high-resolution digital image for publication, request a high-resolution digital image for study, or request permission to use an image from our website of works in the Cantor Arts Center’s collection, please contact cantor_rightsandrepro@stanford.edu


Open and free for everyone.

See for yourself

Quick Links

Contact Us
Host an Event
Newsletter Signup
Press

Cantor Arts Center

328 Lomita Drive at Museum Way
Stanford, CA 94305-5060

Phone: 650-723-4177

Campus Partners

Department of Art and Art History
Stanford Arts
The Anderson Collection
Stanford Live

Join or Renew

©2018 Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University. All rights reserved

Stanford University Logo
Stanford Home Maps & Directions Search Stanford Terms of Use Copyright Complaints
© Stanford University. Stanford, California 94305.