Portfolio: Fake News & Lying Pictures: Political Prints in the Dutch Republic [Exhibition 2022]

Comedians, editorial cartoons, and memes harness the power of satire, parody, and hyperbole to provoke laughter, indignation—even action. These forms of expression are usually traced to eighteenth-century artists, such as William Hogarth, but they are grounded in the unprecedented freedom of artistic expression in the seventeenth-century Dutch Republic. [Curated by Maureen Warren, Curator of European and American Art. With loans; at KAM Aug 25, 2022 through Dec 17, 2022; traveling exhibit]

Records 1 to 59 of 59

Remonstrant Exodus

etching and letterpress on laid paper

Frederick Henry

etching, engraving, and letterpress on paper

Amalia van Solms

etching, engraving, and letterpress on paper

Magdalena Moonsia

engraving on verge type hand-laid paper

Plate I

etching and engraving on paper

Brazil

etching on verge type hand laid paper

Tea, Coffee, Cocoa

etching on verge type hand laid paper

Pepper, West Indian

etching on verge type hand laid paper

Cinnamon, Nutmeg

etching on verge type hand laid paper

Japanese Lacquer

etching on verge type hand laid paper

Hottentots

etching on verge type hand laid paper

Self-Portrait

etching and engraving on laid paper

Massacre of Maastricht Citizens in 1579

etching and engraving on hand laid paper

Records 1 to 59 of 59