Dutch New York Between East and West: The World of Margrieta van Varick
September 18, 2009 to January 3, 2010
This autumn the Bard Graduate Center will participate in a state-wide celebration of the 400th anniversary of Henry Hudson's voyage and the legacy of Dutch culture in New York with a landmark exhibition, Dutch New York Between East and West: The World of Margrieta van Varick. Organized by the BGC and the New-York Historical Society and curated by Marybeth De Filippis and Deborah L. Krohn, Dutch New York will make a major contribution to the quadricentennial and to the scholarship of colonial New York by focusing on the life and times of a woman who during the seventeenth century lived in the rural village of Flatbush on eastern Long Island, a neighborhood still known by that name in the borough of Brooklyn today. The exhibition helps elucidate what the historian Russell Shorto has called the "forgotten colony" in his book The Island at the Center of the World. Indeed, the British roots of New York City are recognized far more widely than the Dutch, despite the city's visible connections to the Dutch founders, most evident in street names such as Amsterdam Avenue and Varick Street.
Dish
ca. 1724
Cornelis Koppens (active 1724-1757)
Tin-glazed earthenware
Diam. 14 1/4 in. (36.2 cm)
Brooklyn Museum, X238
Covered Bowl
Jingdezhen, China, 1620-40
Porcelain
Diam. 5 1/2 in. (14 cm), H. 6 in. (17.8 cm)
Peabody Essex Museum, 2001, AE85967
Nutmeg Grater
Probably England, ca. 1690
Silver and cowrie shell
Marks: none
4 7/8 x 1 3/4 in. (12.7 x 4.4 cm)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Irwin Untermyer, 1968 (68.141.278)
Iron
Europe or North America, late 17th century
Iron, wood
8 x 4 x 8 in. (20.3 x 10.2 x 20.3 cm)
New-York Historical Society, INV.6413