This conference illuminates and expands upon themes explored in two exciting, new exhibitions at the Institute, Delights of the Senses: Seventeenth-Century Dutch Art and Life, Featuring Paintings from The Leiden Collection, and People of the Waters that are Never Still: A Celebration of Mohican Art and Culture.
Lunch at the New York State Museum and admission to the Albany Institute of History & Art to see the exhibition are included in the registration price. Â Please note that we will start the day at the Huxley Theater in the New York State Museum. Â In the afternoon, we will move to the Albany Institute to see the exhibitions and enjoy a reception.
Program
9:00 – 9:15     Registration
9:15 – 9:30     Welcome Remarks
9:30 – 11:00   Panel 1
Albany at 400
BJ Lillis, American Antiquarian Society
From Dutch “Colony” to English Manor: Maria van Rensselaer and the Remaking of Rensselaerswijck after 1674
Chelsea Teale, New Netherland Research Center
Last Patroon/First Lord: Insights from Kiliaen van Rensselaer’s Journal
Cheryle Weber, The Dutch Settlers Society
The Tercentenary celebration in Albany
11:00 – 11:15 Break
11:15 – 12:45 Panel 2
Art History & Material Culture in New Netherland and Dutch New York
Louisa Ruby, Frick Collection
Dutch Art and the Hudson Valley Patroon Painters
Marge Steurbaut, Rice University
The Glazing of Beverwijck’s First Protestant Church: Colonial Power Visualized
Elizabeth Nogrady, The Leiden Collection
Delights of the Senses: Seventeenth-century Dutch Art and Life
12:45 – 2:15   Lunch at the New York State Museum (included in registration fee)
2:15 – 3:45     Panel 3
Finding Indigenous and Enslaved People in Art and Archives
Sarah Mallory, Morgan Library & Museum
Looking for Legacies: Images of Enslavement in Dutch 17th-century Art
Pilar Jefferson, University of California Berkeley
There and Gone: Racial Logics of African and Native American Presence in the Archives of Dutch Albany
Molly Leech, University of Pennsylvania
Materialities and Global Trajectories of the New Netherland Fur Trade
3:45 – 4:15     Travel to Albany Institute of History & Art (5-minute drive, 15-minute walk)
4:15 – 5:30     Visit Exhibitions
5:30 – 7:00     Reception