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After Wenceslaus Hollar (1607-77)

Head of a young Black girl

RCIN 804322

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  • The head and shoulders of a young Black girl, in profile to the right. She is shown wearing a soft, lace edged cap and shoulder wrap with lace edging. The print is a copy after Hollar, see RCIN 804325.

    Though the specificity of this print suggests it was likely drawn from life, the identity of the woman shown is unknown. However, her clothes are typical of those worn by servants in the Netherlands in the seventeenth century. The Dutch were actively involved in the transatlantic slave trade, and it is likely that the woman on whom this print was based was enslaved and brought to the Netherlands to work as a servant for a wealthy Dutch family.

    The Royal Collection holds several prints created by Hollar depicting Black enslaved servants (RCINS 804317–804326, 804328). For other impressions of this print see RCIN 804323 and 804326. From 1635 to 1645, Hollar made five etchings of Black servants and enslaved people, possibly created as a way to demonstrate his talent - as noted in Black in Rembrandt's Time rendering dark skin in an etching required a high level of technical skill: 'there was a high risk that the close hatching grooves meant to hold the ink would break down' leaving areas of white where black had been intended (Black in Rembrandt's Time, Elmer Kolfin and Epco Runia, Rembrandt House Museum, 2020, p. 34). 

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