A mercantile craze for tulips, known as "Tulipomania," arose in Holland in the early seventeenth century. Native to Turkey, the tulip was introduced into Europe in 1554 and quickly became popular in Holland. The insatiable demand for the beautiful, rare bulbs reached its height in 1636, when prices soared and flower merchants enjoyed great wealth. This album of watercolors was used by a wealthy Dutch merchant and grower to show his clients the different varieties of tulip bulbs available for purchase. Inscriptions on the watercolors record the name of each variety, often the grower himself or an influential and wealthy client, as well as the weight and price of each bulb.
Details
- Artist Name: Dutch, 17th century (Dutch, 1600-1699)
- Title: A Tulip Book: Root En Geel Van Leyden
- Date: c. 1640s
- Medium: Gouache, watercolor, and pencil on paper
- Dimensions: 12 1/8 x 7 7/8 in. (30.8 x 20.0 cm)
- Credit Line: Norton Simon Art Foundation
- Accession Number: M.1974.08.022.D
- Copyright: © Norton Simon Art Foundation
Object Information
Tulip Mania: Flower Fever in Seventeenth-Century Holland
- Norton Simon Museum, 2001-03-01 to 2001-07-23
[on loan]
- Henry Art Gallery, 1974 to
Tulipomania
- Frans Hals Museum, 1974-04-05 to 1974-06-08
Tulips are in Bloom
- Norton Simon Museum, 1993-04-29 to 1993-08
Dutch Estates During the 17th and 18th century
- Het Prinsenhof Museum, 1972-07 to 1972-09
Installation
- Norton Simon Museum, 1978-08 to
- Campbell, Sara, Collector Without Walls: Norton Simon and His Hunt for the Best, 2010, cat. 1060 p. 367
Additional Artwork by Artist
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