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Photographed by Scott Wolff.  Scanned from a slide. Color corrected by Pat Cagney.
Shipping in an Unidentified Roadstead
Photographed by Scott Wolff.  Scanned from a slide. Color corrected by Pat Cagney.
Photographed by Scott Wolff. Scanned from a slide. Color corrected by Pat Cagney.

Shipping in an Unidentified Roadstead

Artist Ludolf Bakhuizen (Dutch, 1630-1708)
CultureDutch
Date1701
MediumEtching on laid paper
Dimensions6 3/4 x 9 1/2 in. (17.1 x 24.1 cm)
Overall, Mat: 16 × 20 in. (40.6 × 50.8 cm)
Overall, Frame: 17 1/2 × 21 1/2 in. (44.5 × 54.6 cm)
InscribedSigned LB on the flag flying from the stern of the ship in the center. The signature is repeated below the border at bottom left, together with the address and statement: L. Bakhuizen fec: et exc: cum Privil: ord: Holland: et West Frisiae
Credit LinePurchase, with funds provided from the Walter P. Chrysler, Jr., Art Purchase Fund
Object number2001.34.1.7
On View
Not on view
DescriptionThis is a set of ten etchings with the title plate. In the foreground, from the left to right, are a boeier, which is reducing sail, and a transom yacht of the States-General sailing close-hauled.

Label TextLudolf Bakhuizen Dutch, 1630–1708 The River IJ and Seascapes, 1701 Etchings (prints) on laid paper By the 1600s, Western Europe became one of the most technologically advanced regions of the world and its wealth soared. Printmakers produced series celebrating this natural bounty, material abundance, and technological achievement. Here, Ludolf Bakhuizen catalogues the seafaring prowess of his native Holland with a survey of Dutch nautical craft—from men-of-war and royal yachts to mere rowboats—under weather conditions ranging from windless calm to howling tempest. The series begins with the title page, in Dutch, at upper left. The next print depicts the female personification of Amsterdam riding the waves in the city’s harbor in the triumphal car of the sea-god Neptune—a proud declaration of Amsterdam’s role as Holland’s premier port. Museum purchase 2001.34.1.1–.11 ProvenanceAlbert van Loock collection, Brussels, before 1983; Private collection, New York, 1983-2001; Jeffrey Wortman, New York, New York, 2001; Chrysler Museum of Art Purchase, with funds provided from the Walter P. Chrysler, Jr., Art Purchase Fund, 2001. Exhibition History"Serial Thrillers: The Lure of Old Master Print Series," Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, VA, October 1, 2015 - January 10, 2016.Published ReferencesIrene de Groot and Robert Vorstman, _Marine Prints of the Dutch Masters_ London. 1980, 109-115. Clifford S. Ackley, _Printmaking in the age of Rembrandt_, exh. cat., Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Ma., 1981, 295-297.