Starting in the sixteenth-century, Flemish and Dutch artists turned to everyday subjects, describing the landscape and people around them with humor and loving detail. This exhibition from the DIA collection will include more than seventy works on paper, highlighting prints by Pieter Bruegel I, Hendrick Goltzius, and Rembrandt van Rijn, as well as drawings by Bartolomeus Breenbergh and Esias van de Velde.

Jacques de Gheyn II (1565-1629), Studies of the Heads of Two Youths and an Old Woman,” ca. 1600-1605
Detroit Institute of Arts
Leave feedback
|
Share this on