In the 17th century Amsterdam grew into one of the largest European centres of goldsmith’s art. Johannes Lutma played the leading role there from the late 1620s on. These are 10 things you need to know about him.


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Master in silver
Lutma was a virtuoso, and is portrayed in this painting as such. The tools, a hammer and punches, refer to his technical specialism, namely chasing precious metal. The abstract auricular ornament below his portrait showcases his talent as a designer. Both aspects come together in the extremely modern salt cellar at the right, a testimonial to his artistry.
Portrait of Johannes Lutma, Jacob Adriaensz. Backer, 1638 - 1651 (detail)


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Modern art as the point of departure
These salt cellars reflect modern Baroque imagery. The central figures are Lutma’s variants of a design by a celebrated contemporary sculptor working in Rome, Francois Duquesnoy. The creatures on the base below and the abstracted shell above them refer to the world of the sea.
Two Salt Cellars Johannes Lutma (1584-1669), Amsterdam, 1639, silver, parcel-gilt


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Manifold variations
In Lutma’s hands, the kwab or auricular motifs were scaled-up and abstracted and therefore could be used for multiple purposes. He summarized his ideas in a series of cartouches in the middle of the 17th century, which were subsequently published in print form by his sons.
Title Page of: Veelderhande Nieuwe Compartemente, Jacob Lutma, after Johannes Lutma (1584-1669), 1653


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Exercises in ornamentation
How Lutma’s inventions turned out in practice is evident from his actual works of art. Monster masks and folded pieces of meat flow into each other and form openings. These provide space for depictions of coats of arms, representations and symbols. These make it immediately clear who the objects were intended for.
Four Funeral Shields of the Amsterdam Guild of Corn Measurers Johannes Lutma (1584–1669), Amsterdam, 1633, silver


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Suitable for every format
Decades before his designs appeared in print, Lutma applied the principles they embodied in various formats. This medal is less than 4.5 centimetres high, and yet its expressive power is the same as the large, ten-year older funeral shields above.
Admission Token for the Amsterdam Theatre, Johannes Lutma, 1645


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Suitable for every material
Lutma’s designs could also be executed in other materials. This monumental choir screen for the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam is an interplay of marble and brass. The classicizing framework contrasts with the interlocking and openwork motifs, which at the time were associated with the flames that had consumed the Nieuwe Kerk in 1645.
The Choir Screen of the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam Johannes Lutma the Younger (1624-1685) after Johannes Lutma the Elder (1584-1669), Amsterdam, 1654, etching


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Storyteller
Lutma represented abstract ideas by combining different Roman myths. Here the theme is the Dutch war against water. Depicted on the basin is the sea god Neptune commanding the storms to subside, so that the goddess Ceres on the ewer can make the land flourish.
Ewer and Basin Johannes Lutma (1584-1669), Amsterdam, 1647, silver


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The more complex, the richer the ornament
Lutma combined classicizing reliefs with large-scale and varied ornamentation. The choice of motifs reinforces the maritime theme: a sea monster forms the handle, and sea creatures such as squids and barnacles, as well as foam are recognizable in a host of details.
Ewer and Basin Johannes Lutma (1584-1669), Amsterdam, 1647, silver


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His own idiom
This drinking cup is closest to the Van Vianens’ inventions, and at the same time immediately shows how it differs from them. Lutma focuses on a single moment, thereby yielding a far more dramatic effect. The creature on the edge is reflected in the water, unaware of the dangerous monster awaiting it below the surface.
Drinking cup Johannes Lutma I (c. 1584–1669), silver, 1641


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Hailed by Rembrandt
In 1656, Johannes Lutma, then active in the trade for thirty years, was honoured in all kinds of ways and by various artists. By portraying the goldsmith with a work of art that had launched his career, the painter emphasized that although art is ever young, time passes inexorably for the artist.
Johannes Lutma counterproof, retouched with grey-brown ink, 1656