2002
DOI: 10.2307/3780934
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Art Beats Nature, and Painting Does so Best of All: The Paragone Competition in Duquesnoy, Dou and Schalcken

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“…Dutch artists lived with plaster casts, perhaps more than anyone else in the prosperous Republic, and pictured with him all the material his brother had already packed to be shipped to Paris" (Hecht 2002: 194). Jerôme's access to original works put him in a privileged position to oversee the production of casts to sell (Hecht 2002). By midcentury, there was evidently a lively market for copies of Duquesnoy sculpture in the Netherlands.…”
Section: Reproducing Reproductionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Dutch artists lived with plaster casts, perhaps more than anyone else in the prosperous Republic, and pictured with him all the material his brother had already packed to be shipped to Paris" (Hecht 2002: 194). Jerôme's access to original works put him in a privileged position to oversee the production of casts to sell (Hecht 2002). By midcentury, there was evidently a lively market for copies of Duquesnoy sculpture in the Netherlands.…”
Section: Reproducing Reproductionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hecht in particular has explored how Dou was primarily preoccupied with paragone, citing the modifications he sometimes made to Duquesnoy's composition (Hecht 2002). Given that the source for the relief was a plaster cast, Dou's depictions of it are doubly performative: to boast that paint can completely imitate stone, he must use it to victory over vice and envy.…”
Section: Reproducing Reproductionsmentioning
confidence: 99%