1st Edition

The Cultural Work of the Early Modern Dutch Portrait Amalia van Solms and the Shape of the Self in European Art

By Saskia Beranek Copyright 2026
226 Pages 20 Color & 64 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

226 Pages 20 Color & 64 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The Cultural Work of the Early Modern Dutch Portrait examines how portraits of Amalia van Solms, Princess of Orange (1602–1675), functioned as active cultural agents that connected people across time and space, participating in domestic, national, and international politics throughout the seventeenth century. This interdisciplinary study reveals how portraits served as powerful tools beyond... Read more

0. Introduction: The possibilities of the portrait in the early modern Dutch Republic  1. More than just a pretty face: The Agency of Portraits and their Sites of Display in Early Modern Europe  2. Communicating Power: Portraits as Polemic  3. Huis ten Bosch: Place as Portrait  4. Connecting the Court: Portrait Dissemination, Social Networks, and Cultural Capital  5. Chapter 5: Mapping Impact: Printed Portraits and Public Circulation of Portraits of Amalia van Solms  6. Conclusion

Biography

Saskia Beranek is Associate Professor of Art History at Illinois State University (Normal, Illinois). Her research has focused on Amalia van Solms as a patron, subject, and collector but extends to the cultural agency of Dutch widows more broadly. Previous work has been published in the Journal of the Historians of Netherlandish Art and multiple Amsterdam University Press edited volumes.