Haags Historisch Museum 2017 – Shame on you King o…
Haags Historisch Museum 2017 – Amoena Sophia Frede…
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Pineapple
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Table
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Table
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – William Frederik, Count of N…
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Chapel
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Hendrik Casimir II
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Glass
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Prince
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Front view
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Big pants
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Prince Henry
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – William II
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Prince
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Room
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Bed of King William III
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Room
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Room
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Bed of Queen Mary
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Table
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Bed
Paleis Het Loo 2018 – Room
Haags Historisch Museum 2017 – Letter of William V
Haags Historisch Museum 2017 – Letter by Sideron
Haags Historisch Museum 2017 – Radio
Haags Historisch Museum 2017 – Radio dial
Extension for the municipal museum De Lakenhal
The Hague 2017 – Reserved for International Organi…
The Miniaturist
Pieterskerk-choorsteeg
Café De Bonte Koe
Cat
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Hooglandse Kerkgracht
Haags Historisch Museum 2017 – Calibrating gas met…
Haags Historisch Museum 2017 – Coin-operated gas m…
Brooms and torches
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Japanmuseum SieboldHuis 2017 – Ressei-men
Japanmuseum SieboldHuis 2017 – Nō theatre mask
Japanmuseum SieboldHuis 2017 – Ishiōjō
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Haags Historisch Museum 2017 – Order of the Garter
Exhibition African servants at The Hague court.
From the website:
"In the exhibition African servants at The Hague court the Historical Museum of The Hague tells the life stories of Willem Frederik Cupido, Guan Anthony Sideron and other African servants who, in slavery, were offered as presents to European courts during the eighteenth century. The exhibition highlights an aspect of Dutch history that so far has remained relatively unknown. Whereas exhibitions about courtly life often overlook servants, and especially those with a non-European background, The Historical Museum of The Hague is now specifically focusing on them.
The main impetus for the exhibition is a painting in the museum's collection, made by Hendrik Pothoven in 1781. It shows Stadtholder William V and his retinue, including the servants Cupido and Sideron, who were approximately seven years old when they arrived in The Hague from Guinea and Curaçao. Young boys without family, far from their homelands and entirely at the mercy of adult strangers. Who were these boys? What were their lives at court like? And were they treated as slaves, or as free employees?
The exhibition examines the life stories of Cupido, Sideron and other servants of African descent, in light of changing views about skin colour and slave uprisings in the colonies. Top works in the exhibition include the bust of an African servant from the British Royal Collection and the installation that Curaçao-born artist Tirzo Martha (born 1965) created exclusively for this exhibition. The exhibition concludes with a surprising perspective: using Cupido's family tree, the museum went in search of his Dutch descendants to the present day. Who are they, and what do they think about the story of their distant ancestor?"
www.haagshistorischmuseum.nl
From the website:
"In the exhibition African servants at The Hague court the Historical Museum of The Hague tells the life stories of Willem Frederik Cupido, Guan Anthony Sideron and other African servants who, in slavery, were offered as presents to European courts during the eighteenth century. The exhibition highlights an aspect of Dutch history that so far has remained relatively unknown. Whereas exhibitions about courtly life often overlook servants, and especially those with a non-European background, The Historical Museum of The Hague is now specifically focusing on them.
The main impetus for the exhibition is a painting in the museum's collection, made by Hendrik Pothoven in 1781. It shows Stadtholder William V and his retinue, including the servants Cupido and Sideron, who were approximately seven years old when they arrived in The Hague from Guinea and Curaçao. Young boys without family, far from their homelands and entirely at the mercy of adult strangers. Who were these boys? What were their lives at court like? And were they treated as slaves, or as free employees?
The exhibition examines the life stories of Cupido, Sideron and other servants of African descent, in light of changing views about skin colour and slave uprisings in the colonies. Top works in the exhibition include the bust of an African servant from the British Royal Collection and the installation that Curaçao-born artist Tirzo Martha (born 1965) created exclusively for this exhibition. The exhibition concludes with a surprising perspective: using Cupido's family tree, the museum went in search of his Dutch descendants to the present day. Who are they, and what do they think about the story of their distant ancestor?"
www.haagshistorischmuseum.nl
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