Today only: Your gift TRIPLE matched

Donate by midnight for 3X the impact. Can women artists count on you?    

National Museum of Women in the Arts

Women Artists from Antwerp to Amsterdam: Legacy

Blog Category:  NMWA Exhibitions
A portrait of a woman in historical dress surrounded by a garland of fruit and flowers. She is playing a guitar.

Women played a vital role in shaping the visual culture of the Low Countries, present-day Belgium and the Netherlands, during the 17th and early 18th centuries. Women Artists from Antwerp to Amsterdam, 16001750 is the first-ever survey exhibition of women artists from this region and time period. Including more than 40 artists, with many works on view in the United States for the first time, it demonstrates that women were an active and consequential part of one of the most robust and dynamic artistic economies of the era.

Legacy

While many Flemish and Dutch women artists were acclaimed during their lifetimes, they have largely been forgotten or excluded from art history in the intervening centuries. In their essay “Value, Memory, Legacy” in the exhibition’s catalogue, co-curator Virginia Treanor and exhibition assistant Katie Altizer Takata write, “The lack of visibility today of historical women artists and their work stems from a combination of factors including gender bias, canonical bias, and survival bias. A deep-seated and frequently unconscious belief that women artists were just not ‘as good as’ their male peers has contributed to their lack of inclusion in public collections…”.

Works by women artists, such as paintings, paper cuttings, and lace, were highly sought-after during the 17th and 18th centuries, yet they have been disregarded, misidentified, or neglected from art historical scholarship over time. A traditional artistic hierarchy, which holds representational art such as painting and sculpture at the apex, has long excluded mediums in which women were prominent, such as textile works. However, even paintings, drawings, and prints by women have been commonly misattributed to male artists and overlooked for conservation and research.

A still life painting featuring an asymmetrical arrangement of flowers; the central section features pink, orange, yellow, and blue flowers and is dramatically highlighted compared to the background and outer edge of arrangement.
Rachel Ruysch, Roses, Convolvulus, Poppies and Other Flowers in an Urn on a Stone Ledge, ca. late 1680s; Oil on canvas, 42 1/2 x 33 in.; National Museum of Women in the Arts, Gift of Wallace and Wilhelmina Holladay; Photo by Lee Stalsworth

Righting the Canon

Recent scholar­ship has bolstered interest in historical women artists within the art market and museums. The first-ever major exhibition devoted to Rachel Ruysch (1664 to 1750) opened in 2024 at the Alte Pinakothek, Munich, with additional U.S. venues in 2025. This is notable because Ruysch never suffered the fate of misattribution or erasure that many women artists did; she was under-recognized only because of gender bias. Similarly, the work of Judith Leyster (1609 to 1660), whose identity was rediscovered more than a century ago, is only now enjoying success at auction, as evidenced by the Currier Museum of Art’s 2022 acquisition of Boy Holding Grapes and a Hat (ca. 1629).

Additional works in this section shed light on forces that have shaped our unbalanced understanding of the period:

Nicolaas Juweel (ca. 1639 to 1704), Watching a Paper-Cut Wind Toy, ca. 1697

In a historical painting, four light-skinned women and men of various ages stand around and observe a paper-cut wind toy. The background of the painting is dark.
Nicolaas Juweel, Watching a Paper-Cut Wind Toy, ca. 1697; Oil on canvas; London College of Optometrists, inv. LDBOA1999.178; Photo courtesy of the College of Optometrists, London, U.K.

Created by both men and women, paper cuttings were popular and costly art objects of the period. Women artists Johanna Koerten (1650 to 1715), and Elisabeth Rijberg (active 1698 to 1710) were two of the most celebrated paper-cutting artists in the Dutch Republic. Due to the medium’s fragility, as well as its historical exclusion from the canon of “high” art, many examples, such as the three-dimensional work pictured here, have not survived. While the older woman in this painting has not been identified, she may be another paper artist or collector of such works.

Unidentified artist(s), Benediction veil in bobbin lace, ca. 1750-90

An intricate, white, square lace veil appears against a black background. It contains various symbols and some Latin words.
Unidentified artist(s) , Benediction veil in bobbin lace, ca. 1750-90; Linen; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Gift of Mrs. Albert Blum, 1953, inv. 53.162.46; Photo courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Textiles such as lace, some of the most expensive items to purchase in the 17th and 18th centuries, are, today, often valued less than works such as paintings and their female creators are unknown. This devaluation is evident in their sales prices in the art market as well as their lack of visibility within art historical scholarship and many museum collections. Women can be credited with preserving lace for posterity, too, as they assembled many of the most important lace collections in U.S. museums. Without their efforts, much of the cultural legacy of lacemaking might have been lost. 

Catarina Ykens I (1615 to after 1665) or Catarina Ykens II (1659 to after 1689), Portrait of a Woman Playing the Guitar, Surrounded by a Garland of Fruit and Flowers, ca. 1660-80

A portrait of a woman in historical dress surrounded by a garland of fruit and flowers. She is playing a guitar.
Catarina Ykens I or Catarina Ykens II, Portrait of a Woman Playing the Guitar, Surrounded by a Garland of Fruit and Flowers, ca. 1660–80; Oil on panel; Private collection; Image courtesy of Sotheby’s

Works by women are becoming more popular to acquire—both by collectors and museums—as individuals and institutions learn about recent research into historical women artists and seek to broaden their collections. This painting has been attributed to both Ykens I and Ykens II, who, in addition to being related and sharing a name, also had similar painting styles. More research into these artists is needed to clarify their respective oeuvres.

Recovering and recognizing Dutch and Flemish women’s artistic contributions provides a fuller appreciation of the past. With this renewed interest, the work of more women is being rediscovered, with many more undoubtedly left to find.


Want to learn more? Visit Women Artists from Antwerp to Amsterdam, 1600-1750, through January 11, 2026, and buy the exhibition catalogue from NMWA’s museum shop.

Related Posts