Museums in Holland 🇳🇱 (3)

with Italian gold-ground panels in their collection

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