National Gallery of Art, Washington °

NGA - National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. | Constitution Avenue between Third and Ninth Streets
Washington

plan route show map

artist / participant

curator

press release

One of the most important and beloved artists of the seventeenth century, Gerard ter Borch (1617–1681) is best known today for his paintings of elegant interior encounters among upper-class members of Dutch society. His oeuvre, however, is broad, covering portraiture, landscape, history painting, and a wide range of genre subjects including guardroom and merry company scenes.

Ter Borch is renowned for his ability to render the varied textures of luxurious fabrics such as silk, satin, lace, and leather—a skill at which he was unsurpassed. His genre paintings follow common themes and compositions of his time—letter writing, discreet encounters between men and women, and family interactions, among other subjects—yet he is unique among his contemporaries for his psychological insight into the drama of the encounters he depicted, capturing with exceptional sensitivity the inner life of his subjects.

This landmark exhibition includes approximately fifty paintings selected by Guest Curator Arthur K. Wheelock Jr., Curator of Northern Baroque Paintings at the National Gallery of Art. Gerard ter Borch is the first exhibition of Ter Borch’s work in this country and gives a broad overview of his oeuvre. It is accompanied by the first major English-language publication on Ter Borch, with contributions by the guest curator; Alison M. Kettering, the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Art History at Carleton College; Arie Wallert, Curator of Paintings at the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam; and Marjorie Wieseman, Curator of European Painting and Sculpture at the Cincinnati Art Museum.

The exhibition is organized by the American Federation of Arts, New York, and the National Gallery of Art, Washington.

Pressetext

stationen / venues

07.11.04 - 30.01.05 National Gallery, Washington
27.02.05 - 22.05.05 Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit