Museums in Holland 🇳🇱 (3)
with Italian gold-ground panels in their collection
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam (rijksmuseum.nl)
The Rijksmuseum's collection of more than 3,000 paintings is concentrated in the 16th and 17th centuries, with the highlights of Dutch and Flemish art — Rembrandt, Vermeer, and the Golden Age masters — as its defining identity. The museum was built around the national patrimony of the Netherlands rather than through systematic engagement with the Italian Primitives, and its holdings of Italian gold-ground panel painting from c. 1250–1430 are accordingly thin.
The one confirmed Italian gold-ground holding of significance for this field is a panel by Bartolomeo Bulgarini (c. 1300/10–1378), one of the most renowned Sienese painters of the decades spanning the mid-14th century, active before and after the Black Death of 1348. Bulgarini's complex scholarly history — his works were long attributed to a fictional "Ugolino Lorenzetti" — was resolved in the 1980s when documentary evidence from the Siena Cathedral archives identified him as the painter of the dispersed St. Victor altarpiece. The Rijksmuseum panel is one of a small number of his works in northern European collections. Beyond Bulgarini, the Rijksmuseum's Italian medieval holdings do not extend to the major Florentine or Sienese masters of the gold-ground tradition. The museum's Italian painting catalogue, one of a series covering the permanent collection, documents the full scope of Italian works held, but pre-1430 gold-ground panels form a marginal strand within a collection whose Italian strength lies emphatically in the Renaissance and later periods. For visitors specifically focused on the gold-ground tradition, the Rijksmuseum is not a primary destination, though its Bulgarinipanel rewards close attention in the context of mid-Trecento Sienese painting.
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam
Museum Catharijneconvent, Utrecht