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Dr. G.M. (Bert) van de Roemer

Faculty of Humanities
Algemene Cultuurwetenschappen

Visiting address
  • Turfdraagsterpad 15
  • Room number: 1.04
Postal address
  • Postbus 94551
    1090 GN Amsterdam
  • Profile and Recent Projects

    Bert van de Roemer is a university lecturer at the Cultural Studies department of the University of Amsterdam. His fields of interest are the history of collections, the relation between the visual arts and natural sciences in past and present, and cultural life in Amsterdam in the early modern period. He has published widely on these subjects, including the Dutch collectors and naturalist Maria Sibylla Merian, Simon Schijnvoet, Frederik Ruysch and Levinus Vincent. (See tab 'Research projects' below for more information). For his research project into the theoretical backgrounds of Dutch collections of curiosities from the early modern period he obtained scholarships from the Institute of Culture and History in Amsterdam, Herzog August Bilbiothek Wolfenbüttel, an Hiob Ludolf Fellowship at Forschungszentrum Gotha and the Max-Planck Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte in Berlin. He is a member of the Maria Sibylla Merian Society and teaches courses like 'The History of Collections', 'Museology' and 'The Discovery of Nature'.

    B. van de Roemer, F. Pieters, K. Etheridge, H. Mulder & M. van Delft eds., Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science, Lannoo, August 2022

    Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717), a German-born woman later living in the Netherlands, is famous for her groundbreaking work on caterpillars, moths and butterflies. Her extraordinary story and her contributions to art and science have fascinated many scholars and nature and art lovers, and have inspired artists and writers alike. In 2017 an international conference in Amsterdam celebrated the conjunction of new scholarship and artistic works related to this pioneering naturalist and artist. This book is the result of this cross-pollination.

    Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science provides new insights into Merian's life and work, re-examines the existing canon, and explores her influence on the contemporary arts. The contributing authors variously investigate her network, her processes and products, and her impact on art and natural history. Her work is compared to that of artists and scientists who preceded and followed her, as well as to that of contemporaries, both male and female. Altogether, this richly illustrated volume presents the most recent knowledge about one of the most remarkable women of the early modern period. The book is edited by Bert van de Roemer, Florence Pieters, Hans Mulder, Kay Etheridge and Marieke van Delft, all members of the Maria Sibylla Merian Society.

    The Serious Naturalist and the Frivolous Collector: Convergent and Divergent Approaches to Nature in D’Amboinsche Rariteitkamer

     D’Amboinsche Rariteitkamer, published in 1705, was a well known treatise on the crustaceans, moluscs and minerals of the Indonesian island Ambon. The traditional literature on this work depicts a difference between the editor of the text and images, Simon Schijnvoet (1652-1727), and the original author, Georg Everhard Rumphius (1627-1702). Schijnvoet was seen as the ‘frivolous collector’ who did not understand the motives of the original author, whereas Rumphius was seen as the ‘serious naturalist’ and biologist avant la lettre, whose work predated Linnaeus. This paper re-evaluates these contrasting views by placing both men against a broader background of a ‘scientific culture’ and ‘knowledge production’, that was in part informed by the practice of collecting. By discussing their views on the classification of specimens, the formation of specific stones, and the locality of fossilised shells, questions emerge about Rumphius’s modernity and Schijnvoet’s alleged indifference. Even though their opinions often diverged, it will be shown that the motives and interests of the two men were not that different.

    https://www.emlc-journal.org/articles/10.18352/emlc.111/

    Bert van de Roemer is a university lecturer at the Cultural Studies department of the University of Amsterdam. His fields of interest are the history of collections, the relation between the visual arts and natural sciences in past and present, and cultural life in Amsterdam in the early modern period. He has published widely on these subjects, including the Dutch collectors and naturalist Maria Sibylla Merian, Simon Schijnvoet, Frederik Ruysch and Levinus Vincent. (See tab 'Research projects' below for more information). For his research project into the theoretical backgrounds of Dutch collections of curiosities from the early modern period he obtained scholarships from the Institute of Culture and History in Amsterdam, Herzog August Bilbiothek Wolfenbüttel, an Hiob Ludolf Fellowship at Forschungszentrum Gotha and the Max-Planck Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte in Berlin. He is a member of the Maria Sibylla Merian Society and teaches courses like 'The History of Collections', 'Museology' and 'The Discovery of Nature'.

    B. van de Roemer, F. Pieters, K. Etheridge, H. Mulder & M. van Delft eds., Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science, Lannoo, August 2022

    Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717), a German-born woman later living in the Netherlands, is famous for her groundbreaking work on caterpillars, moths and butterflies. Her extraordinary story and her contributions to art and science have fascinated many scholars and nature and art lovers, and have inspired artists and writers alike. In 2017 an international conference in Amsterdam celebrated the conjunction of new scholarship and artistic works related to this pioneering naturalist and artist. This book is the result of this cross-pollination.

    Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science provides new insights into Merian's life and work, re-examines the existing canon, and explores her influence on the contemporary arts. The contributing authors variously investigate her network, her processes and products, and her impact on art and natural history. Her work is compared to that of artists and scientists who preceded and followed her, as well as to that of contemporaries, both male and female. Altogether, this richly illustrated volume presents the most recent knowledge about one of the most remarkable women of the early modern period. The book is edited by Bert van de Roemer, Florence Pieters, Hans Mulder, Kay Etheridge and Marieke van Delft, all members of the Maria Sibylla Merian Society.

    The Serious Naturalist and the Frivolous Collector: Convergent and Divergent Approaches to Nature in D’Amboinsche Rariteitkamer

     D’Amboinsche Rariteitkamer, published in 1705, was a well known treatise on the crustaceans, moluscs and minerals of the Indonesian island Ambon. The traditional literature on this work depicts a difference between the editor of the text and images, Simon Schijnvoet (1652-1727), and the original author, Georg Everhard Rumphius (1627-1702). Schijnvoet was seen as the ‘frivolous collector’ who did not understand the motives of the original author, whereas Rumphius was seen as the ‘serious naturalist’ and biologist avant la lettre, whose work predated Linnaeus. This paper re-evaluates these contrasting views by placing both men against a broader background of a ‘scientific culture’ and ‘knowledge production’, that was in part informed by the practice of collecting. By discussing their views on the classification of specimens, the formation of specific stones, and the locality of fossilised shells, questions emerge about Rumphius’s modernity and Schijnvoet’s alleged indifference. Even though their opinions often diverged, it will be shown that the motives and interests of the two men were not that different.

    https://www.emlc-journal.org/articles/10.18352/emlc.111/

    Animalia Paradoxa

    Linnaeus' Animalia Paradoxa 1735 (video essay)

    A video essay about Linnaeus' Animalia Paradoxa, the unclassifiable animals. Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) was the great systemiser of the natural world, who ordered every species in neat sections according their alleged basic essentials. In 1735 he published the first table of his division of the animal world, with six classes: quadrupeds, birds, amphibians, fishes, insects and worms. However, in the lower part of his table was a section with a group of animals that defied classification: the Animalia Paradoxa or the contradictory animals. A category of ten unclassifiable creatures of which Linnaeus doubted if they really existed.  Among them where the hydra, dragon, unicorn, satyr, but also the pelican. We can praise Linnaeus for bringing order into chaos and systemizing nature, but also blame him for making nature less open, less imaginative, and less colourful.

    The video essay was produced from images and sources in the Artis Library, with kind assistance of the curator Hans Mulder, and from different sources on the internet.

    Art opens the Book of Nature (article)

    Collectors of curiosities gained deep knowledge of their naturalia while cleaning, embellishing, positioning, arranging and maintaining the objects they had so onerous obtained. The essay ‘Art opens the Book of Nature’ in the catalogue Medusa’s Menagerie. Otto Marseus van Schrieck and the Scholars illustrates these procedures in the case of three collectors of curiosities of the late seventeenth  and early eighteenth century. The anatomist Frederik Ruysch tried through his ‘art’ of anatomical preservation to dispel the decaying effects of death. Simon Schijnvoet used his knowledge of the ’art’ of classicist architecture to order his collection in an elegant as well as instructive way. Levinus Vincent and Joanna van Breda, producers and merchants of luxury textiles, applied their knowledge of artful textile techniques to make splendorous assemblages of butterflies, beetles, flies and other insects. Through their art the collectors opened the Book of Nature.

    The Amsterdam Network of Maria Sibylla Merian (article)

    For the new facsimile of Maria Sibylla Merian's principal work, Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium from 1705, (facsimile published in October 2016) Bert van de Roemer wrote one of the introductory essays. When Maria Sibylla Merian settled in Amsterdam in 1691 she could have chosen no better place to develop to the full her talent and passion as a naturalist and painter. She describes in the preface of her book how she was stimulated in her entomological research by the insects she found in the many cabinets of curiosities the city harbored. She also took part in a lively network of collectors, naturalist and publishers. This essay describes her relation towards three collectors: Simon Schijnvoet (a fellow naturalist who supported her work), Frederik Ruysch (a distinguished professor in anatomy and botany), and Levinus Vincent (a rival merchant and collector).   

    For more information about the facsimile see: http://www.sibyllamerian.com/home.html.

    Von Uffenbach's visits. Disclosing the cultural industries of Amsterdam in the early eighteenth century (research project)

    By studying and analyzing the handwritten travel account of Z.C. von Uffenbach (1683-1734), this project focus on the geographical distribution of the cultural industry in Amsterdam in the early eighteenth century. Instead of looking at one professional group, the project takes an interdisciplinary perspective, and wants to present a cross section of the total creative scene of Amsterdam. In doing so it will provide new data for historians and scholars of various disciplines. The first results can be found on the digital map http://arkyves.org/view/uffenbach/.

    Von Uffenbach’s travel account Merkwürdige Reisen durch Niedersachsen, Holland und Engelland, published in 1754, is a well known source. However, the original manuscript holds many valuable data that were not included in the final publication. One of the most important assets is that the addresses of many cultural workers are recorded, which makes an analysis of the geographical distribution of this professional and social group possible.

    Linnaeus' Animalia Paradoxa 1735 (video essay)

    A video essay about Linnaeus' Animalia Paradoxa, the unclassifiable animals. Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) was the great systemiser of the natural world, who ordered every species in neat sections according their alleged basic essentials. In 1735 he published the first table of his division of the animal world, with six classes: quadrupeds, birds, amphibians, fishes, insects and worms. However, in the lower part of his table was a section with a group of animals that defied classification: the Animalia Paradoxa or the contradictory animals. A category of ten unclassifiable creatures of which Linnaeus doubted if they really existed.  Among them where the hydra, dragon, unicorn, satyr, but also the pelican. We can praise Linnaeus for bringing order into chaos and systemizing nature, but also blame him for making nature less open, less imaginative, and less colourful.

    The video essay was produced from images and sources in the Artis Library, with kind assistance of the curator Hans Mulder, and from different sources on the internet.

    Jan d'Admiral, The art of preservation expels death.

    Art opens the Book of Nature (article)

    Collectors of curiosities gained deep knowledge of their naturalia while cleaning, embellishing, positioning, arranging and maintaining the objects they had so onerous obtained. The essay ‘Art opens the Book of Nature’ in the catalogue Medusa’s Menagerie. Otto Marseus van Schrieck and the Scholars illustrates these procedures in the case of three collectors of curiosities of the late seventeenth  and early eighteenth century. The anatomist Frederik Ruysch tried through his ‘art’ of anatomical preservation to dispel the decaying effects of death. Simon Schijnvoet used his knowledge of the ’art’ of classicist architecture to order his collection in an elegant as well as instructive way. Levinus Vincent and Joanna van Breda, producers and merchants of luxury textiles, applied their knowledge of artful textile techniques to make splendorous assemblages of butterflies, beetles, flies and other insects. Through their art the collectors opened the Book of Nature.

    Bert van de Roemer is a university lecturer at the Cultural Studies department of the University of Amsterdam. His fields of interest are the history of collections, the relation between the visual arts and natural sciences in past and present, and cultural life in Amsterdam in the early modern period. He has published widely on these subjects, including the Dutch collectors and naturalist Maria Sibylla Merian, Simon Schijnvoet, Frederik Ruysch and Levinus Vincent. (See tab 'Research projects' below for more information). For his research project into the theoretical backgrounds of Dutch collections of curiosities from the early modern period he obtained scholarships from the Institute of Culture and History in Amsterdam, Herzog August Bilbiothek Wolfenbüttel, an Hiob Ludolf Fellowship at Forschungszentrum Gotha and the Max-Planck Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte in Berlin. He is a member of the Maria Sibylla Merian Society and teaches courses like 'The History of Collections', 'Museology' and 'The Discovery of Nature'.

    B. van de Roemer, F. Pieters, K. Etheridge, H. Mulder & M. van Delft eds., Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science, Lannoo, August 2022

    Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717), a German-born woman later living in the Netherlands, is famous for her groundbreaking work on caterpillars, moths and butterflies. Her extraordinary story and her contributions to art and science have fascinated many scholars and nature and art lovers, and have inspired artists and writers alike. In 2017 an international conference in Amsterdam celebrated the conjunction of new scholarship and artistic works related to this pioneering naturalist and artist. This book is the result of this cross-pollination.

    Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science provides new insights into Merian's life and work, re-examines the existing canon, and explores her influence on the contemporary arts. The contributing authors variously investigate her network, her processes and products, and her impact on art and natural history. Her work is compared to that of artists and scientists who preceded and followed her, as well as to that of contemporaries, both male and female. Altogether, this richly illustrated volume presents the most recent knowledge about one of the most remarkable women of the early modern period. The book is edited by Bert van de Roemer, Florence Pieters, Hans Mulder, Kay Etheridge and Marieke van Delft, all members of the Maria Sibylla Merian Society.

    The Serious Naturalist and the Frivolous Collector: Convergent and Divergent Approaches to Nature in D’Amboinsche Rariteitkamer

     D’Amboinsche Rariteitkamer, published in 1705, was a well known treatise on the crustaceans, moluscs and minerals of the Indonesian island Ambon. The traditional literature on this work depicts a difference between the editor of the text and images, Simon Schijnvoet (1652-1727), and the original author, Georg Everhard Rumphius (1627-1702). Schijnvoet was seen as the ‘frivolous collector’ who did not understand the motives of the original author, whereas Rumphius was seen as the ‘serious naturalist’ and biologist avant la lettre, whose work predated Linnaeus. This paper re-evaluates these contrasting views by placing both men against a broader background of a ‘scientific culture’ and ‘knowledge production’, that was in part informed by the practice of collecting. By discussing their views on the classification of specimens, the formation of specific stones, and the locality of fossilised shells, questions emerge about Rumphius’s modernity and Schijnvoet’s alleged indifference. Even though their opinions often diverged, it will be shown that the motives and interests of the two men were not that different.

    https://www.emlc-journal.org/articles/10.18352/emlc.111/

    Animalia Paradoxa

    Linnaeus' Animalia Paradoxa 1735 (video essay)

    A video essay about Linnaeus' Animalia Paradoxa, the unclassifiable animals. Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) was the great systemiser of the natural world, who ordered every species in neat sections according their alleged basic essentials. In 1735 he published the first table of his division of the animal world, with six classes: quadrupeds, birds, amphibians, fishes, insects and worms. However, in the lower part of his table was a section with a group of animals that defied classification: the Animalia Paradoxa or the contradictory animals. A category of ten unclassifiable creatures of which Linnaeus doubted if they really existed.  Among them where the hydra, dragon, unicorn, satyr, but also the pelican. We can praise Linnaeus for bringing order into chaos and systemizing nature, but also blame him for making nature less open, less imaginative, and less colourful.

    The video essay was produced from images and sources in the Artis Library, with kind assistance of the curator Hans Mulder, and from different sources on the internet.

    Art opens the Book of Nature (article)

    Collectors of curiosities gained deep knowledge of their naturalia while cleaning, embellishing, positioning, arranging and maintaining the objects they had so onerous obtained. The essay ‘Art opens the Book of Nature’ in the catalogue Medusa’s Menagerie. Otto Marseus van Schrieck and the Scholars illustrates these procedures in the case of three collectors of curiosities of the late seventeenth  and early eighteenth century. The anatomist Frederik Ruysch tried through his ‘art’ of anatomical preservation to dispel the decaying effects of death. Simon Schijnvoet used his knowledge of the ’art’ of classicist architecture to order his collection in an elegant as well as instructive way. Levinus Vincent and Joanna van Breda, producers and merchants of luxury textiles, applied their knowledge of artful textile techniques to make splendorous assemblages of butterflies, beetles, flies and other insects. Through their art the collectors opened the Book of Nature.

    The Amsterdam Network of Maria Sibylla Merian (article)

    For the new facsimile of Maria Sibylla Merian's principal work, Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium from 1705, (facsimile published in October 2016) Bert van de Roemer wrote one of the introductory essays. When Maria Sibylla Merian settled in Amsterdam in 1691 she could have chosen no better place to develop to the full her talent and passion as a naturalist and painter. She describes in the preface of her book how she was stimulated in her entomological research by the insects she found in the many cabinets of curiosities the city harbored. She also took part in a lively network of collectors, naturalist and publishers. This essay describes her relation towards three collectors: Simon Schijnvoet (a fellow naturalist who supported her work), Frederik Ruysch (a distinguished professor in anatomy and botany), and Levinus Vincent (a rival merchant and collector).   

    For more information about the facsimile see: http://www.sibyllamerian.com/home.html.

    Von Uffenbach's visits. Disclosing the cultural industries of Amsterdam in the early eighteenth century (research project)

    By studying and analyzing the handwritten travel account of Z.C. von Uffenbach (1683-1734), this project focus on the geographical distribution of the cultural industry in Amsterdam in the early eighteenth century. Instead of looking at one professional group, the project takes an interdisciplinary perspective, and wants to present a cross section of the total creative scene of Amsterdam. In doing so it will provide new data for historians and scholars of various disciplines. The first results can be found on the digital map http://arkyves.org/view/uffenbach/.

    Von Uffenbach’s travel account Merkwürdige Reisen durch Niedersachsen, Holland und Engelland, published in 1754, is a well known source. However, the original manuscript holds many valuable data that were not included in the final publication. One of the most important assets is that the addresses of many cultural workers are recorded, which makes an analysis of the geographical distribution of this professional and social group possible.

    The Amsterdam Network of Maria Sibylla Merian (article)

    For the new facsimile of Maria Sibylla Merian's principal work, Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium from 1705, (facsimile published in October 2016) Bert van de Roemer wrote one of the introductory essays. When Maria Sibylla Merian settled in Amsterdam in 1691 she could have chosen no better place to develop to the full her talent and passion as a naturalist and painter. She describes in the preface of her book how she was stimulated in her entomological research by the insects she found in the many cabinets of curiosities the city harbored. She also took part in a lively network of collectors, naturalist and publishers. This essay describes her relation towards three collectors: Simon Schijnvoet (a fellow naturalist who supported her work), Frederik Ruysch (a distinguished professor in anatomy and botany), and Levinus Vincent (a rival merchant and collector).   

    For more information about the facsimile see: http://www.sibyllamerian.com/home.html.

    Digital map with locations visited by Von Uffenbach (http://arkyves.org/view/uffenbach/)

    Von Uffenbach's visits. Disclosing the cultural industries of Amsterdam in the early eighteenth century (research project)

    By studying and analyzing the handwritten travel account of Z.C. von Uffenbach (1683-1734), this project focus on the geographical distribution of the cultural industry in Amsterdam in the early eighteenth century. Instead of looking at one professional group, the project takes an interdisciplinary perspective, and wants to present a cross section of the total creative scene of Amsterdam. In doing so it will provide new data for historians and scholars of various disciplines. The first results can be found on the digital map http://arkyves.org/view/uffenbach/.

    Von Uffenbach’s travel account Merkwürdige Reisen durch Niedersachsen, Holland und Engelland, published in 1754, is a well known source. However, the original manuscript holds many valuable data that were not included in the final publication. One of the most important assets is that the addresses of many cultural workers are recorded, which makes an analysis of the geographical distribution of this professional and social group possible.

  • Research projects

    Redressing the Balance: Joanna van Breda's en Levinus Vincent’s Wonder Theatre of Nature

    For the website Public Domain Review, Bert van de Roemer explored the curiosity cabinet of the Dutch collectors Joanna van Breda and Levinus Vincent and how the aesthetic, cognitive and religious drives behind the meticulous ordering practices blended together, in an attempt to emphasise the wonder of God’s creations by restoring the natural world to its prelapsarian harmony.  Joanna and Levinus created a spectacular 'Wonder Theatre of Nature' in their cabinet and many visitors were amazed and would kneel down in awe for this beautifully arranged collections. As producers and merchant of luxury textiles, like silk, damask and brocade, Levinus and Joanna would employ textile techniques to embellish their collections. Drawers with butterflies, beetles and other insects were arranged in beautiful ornamental forms to add more splendor to God's creation. See full text here: http://publicdomainreview.org/2014/08/20/redressing-the-balance-levinus-vincents-wonder-theatre-of-nature/.

     

    Classification of depicting heads from Goeree's treatise.

    Regulating the Arts: Willem Goeree versus Samuel van Hoogstaten

    In 1670 Willem Goeree (1635-1711) published a small treatise titled Inleyding tot de practijck der al-gemeene schilder-konst (Introduction to the practice of the general art of painting), which was the first of several writings on the arts. Eight years later Samuel van Hoogstraten (1627-1678) published his lengthier Inleyding tot de hooge schoole der schilderkonst (Introduction to the academy of painting). Even though art historians paid less attention to the versatile Goeree, when they discuss them the two writers together they are often treated as if they were of one accord. However, after reading the texts of Van Hoogstraten en Goeree, one might be struck more by the differences rather than by the similarities. They discuss comparable themes, but the reader seems at times to enter another world.

     

    Van Hoogstraten’s writings bear traits that are, for a large part, rooted in the old humanistic and traditional Aristotelian-scholastic school of 'bookish culture'. He shows an accumulative manner of collecting data, not only in his thoughts, but also in the way he transmits these thoughts. Goeree is just as long-winded, but we see a more analytical approach of his topics which at times reveal traces of the New Philosophy. Also an inclination to mathematize and analyse the arts forms a distinct contrast between the two authors. These differences become manifest on different levels: in the organization of their chapters, in the way they render their information, in their opinions on the intellectual development of the artist,  and in their views on the aspect of chance in art. 

     

    Jubilee 'Amsterdam 2013'

    2013 was a special year of celebration for the city of Amsterdam. The festivities pivoted around the historical fact that 400 years ago the burgomasters of Amsterdam decided to the construction of the famous canal ring. Other festivities were: the re-opening of the Rijksmuseum after 10 years, 125 years of Royal Concertgebouw and Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, 175 years of Artis Zoo (the zoological garden), 225 years of Felix Meritis (the centre of Enlightenment), 150 years since the abolition of slavery (the Dutch were rather late with that) and 40 years of Van Gogh Museum. The newly formed organization of Amsterdam Marketing coordinated all these festivities in an efficient and effective way. An item of the journal Amstelodamum reflects on the year and discusses related topics and publications. See: Amstelodamum 101 (2014)-1, p. 32-45

    Amstelodamum

    Het geheugen van de buurt: musea, archieven, websites

    Buurtbewoners in Amsterdam ondernemen steeds vaker actie om het erfgoed van hun directe omgeving veilig te stellen en onder de aandacht te brengen. Zij richten kleinschalige organisaties op die zich op microniveau inzetten voor het materieel en immaterieel erfgoed van hun directe omgeving door middel van acquisitie, beheer en presentatie. Voor het maandblad Amstelodamum onderzocht Van de Roemer negen van deze initiatieven: musea, archieven en websites. Deze buurtinitiatieven hebben vooral de laatste twee decennia opgang gemaakt. Elizabeth Crooke's Museums and Community geeft een goede introductie op het onderwerp.In deze studie gaat zij uit van het begrip community museums; een begrip dat ruimer gehanteerd wordt dan de buurtmusea die in dit onderzoek centraal staan. Crooke beschouwt de buurtinitiatieven als onofficiële tegenhangers van de gevestigde staats- of stadsgestuurde musea. Zij leveren een grote bijdrage aan een positief identiteitsgevoel en de sociale cohesie binnen de gemeenschap. De Amsterdamse buurtmusea worden vanuit dit kader behandeld. Het onderzoek, gepubliceerd in Maandblad Amstelodamum 97-3 (2010), is gebaseerd op interviews met betrokkenen en geeft een beeld van het rijke aanbod in Amsterdam.

    Foetus skeleton prepared by Frederik Ruysch

    From vanitas to veneration. The embellishments in the anatomical cabinet of Frederik Ruysch

    The elaborate way in which the Dutch physician and collector Frederik Ruysch (1638-1731) decorated and presented his anatomical cabinet has raised the question of whether we should view him as a scientist or rather as an artist. In the past, the embellishment of the preparations was interpreted as supplementary or opposed to his quest for anatomical knowledge: the artistic adornments were designed to comfort the beholder confronted with death or were meant as self-confident statements about Ruysch artistry. In an article that will be published in Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek van de Roemer stresses the importance of another train of thought in which the two are not regarded as distinct but ofthe same order and intimately related.

    Ruysch often used textiles to decorate his preparations. Dissected arms, legs and heads were dressed up with fine damask that served to cover up the wounds. Likewise, instead of common cloth he often used meticulously injected human tissue to coverhis phials. He moulded skeletons of crying fetuses holding human tissue as handkerchiefs to wipe their tears. Scenes like these reminded Ruysch of Psalm 138,in which God's creation of the human body is compared to an intricate piece of embroidery. In his anatomical work, Ruyschstressed that all organs were made up of vessels and veins (Omne Organon ex Vasibus), and needlework was an appropriate metaphor to stress the elaborateness of God's own handiwork. In his cabinet, Ruysch combined this "divine embroidery" with textiles made by the human hand, thereby emphasizing the existence of an intellectual entity that was responsible for the human tissue. This way of working concurred with contemporary physico-theological discussions against atheism, in which the so-called argument from design played an important role. The decorations also served as visual stimuli to enhance a sense of wonderment regarding the divine intelligence of creation.

    Three shell drawers

    Dissertation: Nature and Art in a Dutch Collection of Curiosities

    The motives of collectors of curiosities from the so-called Dutch Golden Age have generally been considered from a social and economical point of view. In his dissertation van de Roemer shows that Dutch collectors of shells, minerals, insects, coins and precious artefacts certainly also had a more theoretical understanding of their objects and their collecting activities. With the collection of the  Amsterdam provost Simon Schijnvoet (1652-1727) as a case study, he explores the relationships between the religious, scientific and aesthetic rationales and concludes that systematic and aesthetic ordering principles found a common base in religious reflections on nature.
    For a better understanding, Schijnvoet's collection is placed against a background of the struggle against atheism (Spinoza) and the rise of fysicotheology (Boyle, Ray), topics which were hotly debated in Amsterdam around 1700. The view of nature as a complex mechanistic product directly governed by thehand of God according binding mathematical laws seems also to have had a distinctive influence on contemporary classicist art theory. In the collections, cross references between products of art and nature became manifest. Van de Roemer received his Ph.D. in November 2005. The title of his dissertation is: De geschikte natuur. Theorieën over natuur en kunst in de verzameling van zeldzaamheden van Simon Schijnvoet 1652-1727 ( Neat Nature. Theories about nature and art in the collection of curiosities of Simon Schijnvoet 1652-1727 ).

    De schilderende natuur: figuurstenen

    'Het is ongelooflyk voor die dezelve nooit beschouwt hebben; men ziet'er in woestenyen, bergen, stroomen, vervalle gebouwen, steeden, gewolkte luchten, en andere zeldzaame gezichten,' schreef de verzamelaar van zeldzaamheden Simon Schijnvoet (1652-1727) bij de prent die hij had laten maken voor D'Amboinsche Rariteitkamer (1705). De prent laat een keur aan opmerkelijke stenen zien.Deze zogenaamde figuurstenen waren gewilde verzamelobjecten omdat zij door de natuur zelf van fraaie afbeelding waren voorzien. De fascinatie voor de stenen kwam voort uit hun ambigue status tussen kunst en natuur. In deze zeldzaamheden leek de gebruikelijke verhouding tussen de twee domeinen te zijn omgekeerd: hier imiteerde de kunst niet de natuur, maar de natuur de kunst. Op de prent zijn verschillende soorten figuurstenen te herkennen. De 'boomstenen' lieten allerlei vegetatieve vormen zien. De tekeningen van 'landschapsstenen' riepen associaties op met rotslandschappen of met steden in bergen. 'Tuinstenen' toonden overeenkomsten met plattegronden van tuinen, forten of eilanden. Naast deze meer reguliere figuurstenen zijn nog twee uitzonderlijke exemplaren afgebeeld: bovenaan een klein stuk Egyptisch marmer met de gedaante van een biddende pausen in het midden een grote Duitse agaat met een tekening van een grot.
    Rond 1700 waren er allerlei theorieën in omloop over het ontstaan van deze stenen. Rumphius dacht dat de bijzondere tekeningen onder invloed van de planeten tot stand kwamen. De grillige en variabele vormen van de tekeningen schreef hij toe aan het veranderlijke en bedrieglijke karakter van de planeet Mercurius. Een andere verklaring voor de boomstenen werd geopperd door de jezuïet Athanasias Kircher. In zijn D'Onderaardse Wereld (1684) veronderstelt hij dat boomstenen ontstaan doordat resten van planten in de massa waaruit een steen gevormd wordt terecht is gekomen. In 1735 kwam de Duitse predikant Friedrich Christian Lesser (1692-1754) met een verklaring voor boomstenen die de huidige opvatting benadert. In zijn Lithotheologie veronderstelt hij dat gekleurde, minerale sappen door de stenen trekken, waardoor tekeningen ontstaan die op bomen, of zelfs op boslandschappen lijken. Na deze verklaring benadrukt Lesser dat God, als wijs en kundig schilder, de hand in deze werken heeft, omdat hij zowel verantwoordelijk is voor de materie, als voor de natuurlijke processen waardoor de materie beweegt. Beschouw, zo maant hij de lezer, daarom de stenen niet als een grappig spel, maar als een genoegen voorde ogen, dat ons door de Schepper gegund is. ['Verklaring der prent' in: De Achttiende Eeuw 36 (2004), nr. 2.]

    Russische catalogus Kunstkamera

    The Kunstkamera of St. Petersburg

    From 2000 to 2005 van de Roemer contributed to the international research project 'The "Paper Museum" of the Academy of Science in St.-Petersburg (1735-1765)', a collaboration between the Universiteit van Amsterdam, the Amsterdam Historical Museum, the Hermitage and the Academy of Sciences of St. Petersburg. Aim of this project was the unlocking of the approximately 2,200 surviving drawingsthat were made of the objects kept in the Kunstkamera in St. Petersburg.
    In the early eighteenth century, Russian ruler Peter the Great established the Kunstkamera as an encyclopaedic museum of the Academy of Sciences.The drawings cover a wide range of disciplines, from botany and anatomy to archaeology and Chinese objects, and were used to document the objects in the museum's collections and to illustrate Academy members' publications. The volume, for which Van de Roemer edited the catalogue, was published by Edita (see reference).

    The 'kunstkamer' in the Royal Palace Amsterdam

    A continuing research project of Van de Roemer deals with the first municipal kunstkamer of Amsterdam . On 28 April 1699 a group of painters received permission from the burgomasters to establish a kunstkamer (literally: art chamber) in the majestic town hall on the Dam Square .The aim was to breathe new life into the city's artistic endeavours. A large hall , which was suitable for different purposes, was placed attheartists' disposal. First, it enabled the artists to exhibit and sell their work. Second, a start was made arranging and conserving the city's collection, which also functioned as a study collection for young artists.Third, the spacious room was also usedasan academy in which 'the fraternityofpainters' could organise lessons in drawing and painting. The fact that surprisingly little research has been carried out on this first manifestation of cultural policy of the Amsterdam city council, may be due to the limited impact of the art chamber on the city's art life. 
    In 2000 Bert van de Roemer supervised a team of art history students to unearth some facts about the founding of the forgotten and unknown art chamber. He continued his research in 2004, together with Eymert-Jan Goossens ( Royal Palace on the Dam ), which led to a preliminary publication 'The art chamber in the town hall of Amsterdam ' in: Backhuysen at the Helm! (Amsterdam 2004).

  • Teaching
    Museum Project Charlotte Salomon (minor Museum Studies)

    Museology (bachelor course Cultural Studies)

    Museums tell us how societies create, articulate, reflect, orchestrate and present knowledge and esthetic experiences. The course Museology gives insight in contemporary museum practices and the theoretical reflections on these practices. In seven lectures relevant themes are discussed, such as missions and ideals, museum architecture, collecting, museum displays, commercialism, restitution and repatriation. During the seminars and excursions students will be trained in analyzing museum displays through the method of discourse analysis. In the second half of the course students become acquainted with the work field through excursions and talks with specialists or by working on an assignment given by a museum.

    The video gives an example of a practice situation. In 2017-18 students were asked by the Jewish Historical Museum in Amsterdam to study and reflect on the work of the artiste Charlotte Salomon by making video essays. These essays were presented in the museum. (course description in Dutch)

    Collecting: historical perspective
    (bachelor course Cultural Studies)

    Kunst- und Wunderkammer, cabinets of curiosities and encyclopedic collections still form a source of inspiration for contemporary artists, philosophers and writers. These collections of the past reflect the world view of the owners and the society they lived in. This course presents an overview of the history of collections from the sixteenth to the twentieth century and relates them to general philosophical ideas about the world, nature and the arts. It describes how old private collections were transformed into the first public museums in the eighteenth century, and how they evolved in anonymous state institutes in the nineteenth century. Topics discussed are the German Kunst- und Wunderkammer, Italian studioli, Dutch cabinets of curiosities, the Kunstkamera in St. Petersburg, the Glypothek in Munich, the Louvre in Paris, the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and the Museumsinsel in Berlin. (course description in Dutch)

    Teaching

    • The Discovery of Nature (honors program Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies)
    • History of Collections BA
    • Museology BA
    • Art, Affect and Knowledge MA
    • Founders of Museology MA
    • Excursion Museum Studies MA (Berlin, Athens/Istanbul)
    • Philosophy of Humanities (for Art History and Cultural Studies) BA
    • Canon of European Culture BA
    • Approaches in Art History BA
    • Artefact: cultural heritage or booty? BA
    • Iconology and Visual Analysis

    Past courses

    • Cultuurbeleid: inleiding (Cultural Policy: introduction)
    • Kunst en kennis: interactie tussen wetenschap en beeldende kunst van 1300 tot heden (Art and Knowledge: interaction between the Sciences and the Visual Arts from 1300 untill present)
    • Academische Vaardigheden (Academic Skills)
    • De geschiedenis van de kunstkamer in het stadhuis op de Dam 1655-1808 (The History of the Art Chamber in the Amsterdam Town Hall on the Dam Square 1655-1808)

    Museology (bachelor course Cultural Studies)

    Museums tell us how societies create, articulate, reflect, orchestrate and present knowledge and esthetic experiences. The course Museology gives insight in contemporary museum practices and the theoretical reflections on these practices. In seven lectures relevant themes are discussed, such as missions and ideals, museum architecture, collecting, museum displays, commercialism, restitution and repatriation. During the seminars and excursions students will be trained in analyzing museum displays through the method of discourse analysis. In the second half of the course students become acquainted with the work field through excursions and talks with specialists or by working on an assignment given by a museum.

    The video gives an example of a practice situation. In 2017-18 students were asked by the Jewish Historical Museum in Amsterdam to study and reflect on the work of the artiste Charlotte Salomon by making video essays. These essays were presented in the museum. (course description in Dutch)

    The Kunstkamera in St. Petersburg: a good example of an Encyclopedic Palace

    Collecting: historical perspective
    (bachelor course Cultural Studies)

    Kunst- und Wunderkammer, cabinets of curiosities and encyclopedic collections still form a source of inspiration for contemporary artists, philosophers and writers. These collections of the past reflect the world view of the owners and the society they lived in. This course presents an overview of the history of collections from the sixteenth to the twentieth century and relates them to general philosophical ideas about the world, nature and the arts. It describes how old private collections were transformed into the first public museums in the eighteenth century, and how they evolved in anonymous state institutes in the nineteenth century. Topics discussed are the German Kunst- und Wunderkammer, Italian studioli, Dutch cabinets of curiosities, the Kunstkamera in St. Petersburg, the Glypothek in Munich, the Louvre in Paris, the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and the Museumsinsel in Berlin. (course description in Dutch)

    Teaching

    • The Discovery of Nature (honors program Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies)
    • History of Collections BA
    • Museology BA
    • Art, Affect and Knowledge MA
    • Founders of Museology MA
    • Excursion Museum Studies MA (Berlin, Athens/Istanbul)
    • Philosophy of Humanities (for Art History and Cultural Studies) BA
    • Canon of European Culture BA
    • Approaches in Art History BA
    • Artefact: cultural heritage or booty? BA
    • Iconology and Visual Analysis

    Past courses

    • Cultuurbeleid: inleiding (Cultural Policy: introduction)
    • Kunst en kennis: interactie tussen wetenschap en beeldende kunst van 1300 tot heden (Art and Knowledge: interaction between the Sciences and the Visual Arts from 1300 untill present)
    • Academische Vaardigheden (Academic Skills)
    • De geschiedenis van de kunstkamer in het stadhuis op de Dam 1655-1808 (The History of the Art Chamber in the Amsterdam Town Hall on the Dam Square 1655-1808)
  • Publications

    Publications

    • Bert van de Roemer, Florence Pieters, Kay Etheridge, Hans Mulder & Marieke van Delft (eds.), Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science, Tielt 2022.
    • 'The Merian-Rumphius Connection. Merian's Alledged Contritubtion to D'Amboinsche Rariteitkamer' in: B. v.d. Roemer et al. (eds.), Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science, Tielt 2022, p. 154-170.
    • with Florence Pieters, 'In Search of Friendship. Maria Sibylla Merian's Traces in Friendship Albums (alba amicorum)' in: B. v.d. Roemer et al. (eds.), Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science, Tielt 2022, p. 74-86.
    • with Yulia Dunaeva, 'How to Crack Such Shells? Maria Sibylla Merian and Catalogues of Zoological Specimens' in: B. v.d. Roemer et al. (eds.), Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science, Tielt 2022, p. 252-170.
    • 'The Serious Naturalist and the Frivolous Collector. Convergent and divergent approaches to Nature' in D'Amboinsche Rartiteitkamer' in: Early Modern Low Countries, december 2019, p. 208–233 (https://www.emlc-journal.org/articles/10.18352/emlc.111/)
    • 'The World Exposed. Dissecting three exceptional Dutch collections' in: Scala Regia 6, winter 2019-2020, p. 21-33
    • 'Water' in: Be Water Again, text and images for catalogue by group show curated by Panos Giannikopoulos and Theodoulos Polyviou in at Koraï Project Space, 21 December 2018 - 11 January 2019, Nicosia, Cyprus 
    • 'Art Opens the Book of Nature: Skillfulness and Knowledge in Dutch Curiosity Cabinets around 1700' in: G. Seelig (ed.), Medusa's Menagerie: Otto Marseus van Schrieck and the Scholars, Munich & Schwerin 2017, p. 127-139
    • 'Anatomy Embellished in the Cabinet of Frederik Ruysch' in: Joanna Ebenstein (ed.), Death: A Graveside Companion, New York 2017, p. 53-54
    • with T. van der Molen, Maria Sibylla Merian. De schatkamercollectie, Amsterdam Museum 2017
    • 'Gedenkjaar Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717): een vrouw op het snijvlak van kunst en wetenschap'in: Amstelodamum 104-2 (2017), p. 90-93
    • 'Merian's network of collector-naturalists' in: H. Mulder & M. van Delft (ed.), Maria Sibylla Merian 'Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium' 1705, Den Haag & Tielt 2016, p. 19-28
    • 'Merians Netzwerk von sammelnden Naturliebhabern' in: H. Mulder & M. van Delft, Maria Sibylla Merian 'Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium' 1705, Darmstadt 2016, p. 19-28
    • 'De gebroeders Von Uffenbach en de creatieve industrie van Amsterdam in de vroege achttiende eeuw' in: Amstelodamum 102-4 (2015), p. 161-174
    • 'Redressing the Balance: Levinus Vincent’s Wonder Theatre of Nature' in: A. Green (ed.), The Public Domain Review: selected essays. - Vol. II, Cambridge 2015, p. 46-59.
    • met E. Schmitz & M. Klein, 'Historische kaarten opnieuw geschud Digitale ontwikkelingen en het veranderende beeld van de Amsterdamse geschiedenis'in: Amstelodamum 102-4 (2015), p. 147-160
    • '"En dat is nog niet alles." Het jubeljaar Amsterdam 2013', Amstelodamum 101-1 (2014), p. 32-36
    • 'Simon Schijnvoet, een 'voornaam liefhebber'. De inventor van de schildering boven de ingang van de burgerzaal van het stadhuis op de Dam', Amstelodamum 99-4 (2012), p. 147-160.
    •  'Regulating the Arts: Willem Goeree versus Samuel van Hoogstraten' in: Art and Science in the early modern Netherlands. Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art 61 (2011), p. 185-207
    • 'From vanitas to veneration. The embellishments in the anatomical cabinet of Frederik Ruysch' in: Journal of the History of Collections  22-2 (2010), p. 169-186  (https://academic.oup.com/jhc/article/22/2/169/780339)
    • 'Nature Painting. Theories about figured stones around 1700' in: N. Adamowsky, H. Böhme, R. Felfe (ed.), Ludi Naturae. Spiele der Natur in Kunst und Wissenschaft , München 2010, p. 218-234
    • 'Het geheugen van de buurt: musea, archieven, websites' in: Amstelodamum 97-3 (2010), p. 128-141
    • book review: Barbara Marx, Karl-Siegbert Rehberg (Hg.): Sammeln als Institution. Von der fürstlichen Wunderkammer zum Mäzenatentum des Staates . München/Berlin 2006 in: ArtHist, 05.07.2009. (http://www.arthist.net/download/book/2009/090705Roemer.pdf )
    • 'Het lichaam als borduursel: kunst en kennis in het anatomisch kabinet van Frederik Ruysch' in: Body and Embodiment in Netherlandish Art. Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek, vol. 58 (2008), p. 216-240
    • De geschikte natuur. Theorieën over natuur en kunst in de verzameling van zeldzaamheden van Simon Schijnvoet (1652-1727) , dissertatie 2005  (http://dare.uva.nl/record/167482 )
    • (editor catalogue) R.E. Kistemaker, N.P. Kopaneva, D.J. Meijers, e.a., The Paper Museum of the Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg, c. 1725-1760, Amsterdam 2005 (http://dare.uva.nl/record/137888 )
    • (in cooperation with Eymert Goossens) 'Backhuysen en de kunstkamer' in: E. Goossens (ed.), Backhuysen aan het roer! Zeeschilder 1630-1708 , Amsterdam (Koninklijk Paleis) 2004, 20-34
    • 'Neat Nature. The relation between art and nature in a Dutch cabinet of curiosities from the early eighteenth century' in: History of Science 42 (2004),47-84
    • (in cooperation with Debora Meijers), 'Ein "gezeichnetes Museum" und seine Funktion - damals und heute' in: Palast des Wissens. Die Kunst- und Wunderkammer Zar Peters des Grossen. Band 2 (München 2003), 168-182
    • 'God en het rariteitenkabinet. Het religieuze motief van Noord-Nederlandse rariteitenverzamelaars eind zeventiende en begin achttiende eeuw' in: Theoretische Geschiedenis 25 (1998), nr. 2/3, 242-255
    • 'De geschikte natuur. De verhouding tussen kunst en natuur in het rariteitenkabinet van Simon Schijnvoet (1652-1727)' in: Bulletin. Geschiedenis, Kunst, Cultuur 5 (1996), nr. 1, 45-75
    • 'Een uitnodiging tot meer openheid' in: Simulacrum 3 (1994), nr. 2, 29-30
    • 'Twee maal kijken naar twee Madonna's' in: Simulacrum 2 (1993), nr. 2, 23-26
    • 'Uffenbachs vertellingen. Nederlandse rariteitenkabinetten anno 1711' in: Simulacrum 1 (1992), nr. 2, 23-27
    • (in cooperation with Margiet Schavemaker and Charlie Smid) 'Interview met E.H. Gombrich'  in: Simulacrum 1 (1991), nr. 0, 13-15
  • Publications

    2022

    • Dunaeva, Y., & van de Roemer, B. (2022). How to Crack Such Shells? Maria Sibylla Merian and Catalogues of Zoological Specimens. In B. van de Roemer, F. Pieters, H. Mulder, K. Etheridge, & M. van Delft (Eds.), Maria Sibylla Merian: Changing the Nature of Art and Science (pp. 252-264, 278). Lannoo.
    • Pieters, F. F. J. M., & van de Roemer, G. (2022). In Search of Friendship. Maria Sibylla Merian's Traces in Friendship Albums (alba amicorum). In B. van de Roemer, F. Pieters, H. Mulder, K. Etheridge, & M. van Delft (Eds.), Maria Sibylla Merian: Changing the Nature of Art and Science (pp. 74-86). Lannoo.
    • van de Roemer, B. (2022). The Merian-Rumphius Connection. Merian's Alledged Contritubtion to D'Amboinsche Rariteitkamer. In B. de Roemer, F. Pieters, H. Mulder, K. Etheridge, & M. van Delft (Eds.), Maria Sibylla Merian: Changing the Nature of Art and Science (pp. 154-170, 273-274). Lannoo. [details]
    • van de Roemer, B. (2022). The Remainders of a Reconstruction: Visualizing Ruysch's Collection. In J. Ebenstein (Ed.), Frederik Ruysch and his Thesaurus Anatomicus: A Morbid Guide (pp. 23-35). The MIT Press. [details]
    • van de Roemer, B., Pieters, F., Mulder, H., Etheridge, K., & van Delft, M. (Eds.) (2022). Maria Sibylla Merian: Changing the Nature of Art and Science. Lannoo. [details]

    2019

    • van de Roemer, G. M. (2019). The Serious Naturalist and the Frivolous Collector. Convergent and Divergent Approaches to Nature in D’Amboinsche Rariteitkamer . Early Modern Low Countries , 3(2), 208-233. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.18352/emlc.111 [details]

    2017

    • van de Roemer, B. (2017). Art Opens the Book of Nature: Skilfulness and Knowledge in Dutch Curiosity Cabinets around 1700. In G. Seelig (Ed.), Medusa's Menagerie: Otto Marseus van Schrieck and the Scholars (pp. 127-139). Hirmer Verlag. [details]

    2011

    • van de Roemer, G. (2011). Nature Painting: Theories about figured stones around 1700. In N. Adamowsky, H. Böhme, & R. Felfe (Eds.), Ludi naturae: Spiele der Natur in Kunst und Wissenschaft (pp. 219-234). München: Wilhelm Fink. [details]
    • van de Roemer, G. M. (2011). Regulating the arts: Samuel van Hoogstraten versus Willem Goeree. In E. Jorink, & B. Ramakers (Eds.), Art and Science in the Early Modern Netherlands (pp. 184-207). (Nederlands kunsthistorisch jaarboek = Netherlands yearbook for history of art; No. 61). WBooks. [details]

    2010

    • van de Roemer, G. M. (2010). From vanitas to veneration: the embellishments in the anatomical cabinet of Frederik Ruysch. Journal of the History of Collections, 22(2), 169-186. https://doi.org/10.1093/jhc/fhp044 [details]

    2023

    • van de Roemer, G. M., & Sterling, C. P. (2023). Het Paleis voor Duurzaamheid: Amsterdamse notitie; opinie en actualitei. Amstelodamum, 110(2), 114-121.

    2016

    2015

    • van de Roemer, G. M. (2015). De gebroeders Von Uffenbach en de creatieve industrie van Amsterdam in de vroege achttiende eeuw. Amstelodamum, 102(4), 161-174.
    • van de Roemer, G. M., Schmitz, E., & Klein, M. (2015). Historische kaarten opnieuw geschud Digitale ontwikkelingen en het veranderende beeld van de Amsterdamse geschiedenis. Amstelodamum, 102(4), 147-160.

    2014

    2012

    • van de Roemer, B. (2012). Simon Schijnvoet, een 'voornaam liefhebber'. De inventor van de schildering boven de ingang van de burgerzaal van het stadhuis op de Dam. Amstelodamum, 99(4), 147-160. [details]

    2010

    • van de Roemer, B. (2010). Het geheugen van de buurt: musea, archieven, websites. Amstelodamum, 97(3), 128-141. [details]

    2017

    • Lesger, C., Boomgaard, J., Bosmans, S., Klein, M., Micheels, P., Mulder, D., van Oosterzee, L., van de Roemer, B., Schmitz, E., Verkerk, K., Vermeer, G., Zandvliet, K., & Vrolijk, M. (Eds.) (2017). Oeroud Amsterdam: Een zoektocht naar de vroegste geschiedenis van de stad . (Jaarboek van het Genootschap Amstelodamum ; Vol. 109). Bas Lubberhuizen. [details]
    • van de Roemer, B. (2017). Gedenkjaar Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717): een vrouw op het snijvlak van kunst en wetenschap. Amstelodamum, 104(2), 90-93. [details]
    • van de Roemer, B., & van der Molen, T. (2017). Maria Sibylla Merian: De schatkamercollectie. Amsterdam: Amsterdam Museum. [details]

    2016

    • van de Roemer, B. (2016). Merians Netzwerk von sammelnden Naturliebhabern. In M. van Delft, & H. Mulder (Eds.), Maria Sybylla Merian: Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium; Die Verwandlung der surinamischen Insekten: 1705 (pp. 19-28). Darmstadt: Lambert Schneider. [details]
    • van de Roemer, B. (2016). Merians netwerk van verzamelende natuurliefhebbers = Merian's network of collector-naturalists. In M. van Delft, & H. Mulder (Eds.), Maria Sibylla Merian. Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium = Verandering der Surinaamsche insecten = Transformation of the Surinamese insects: 1705 (pp. 19-28). Lannoo. [details]

    Membership / relevant position

    Media appearance

    Journal editor

    • van de Roemer, G. M. (editor) (2017). Amstelodamum (Journal).
    • van de Roemer, G. M. (editor) (2016). Amstelodamum (Journal).
    • van de Roemer, G. M. (editor) & e.a, (editor) (2012). Amstelodamum (Journal).

    Talk / presentation

    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (22-2-2024). Indigenous Knowledge in the Work of Maria Sibylla Merian and Georg Everhard Rumphius, ‘A Great Miracle is Man’
      , Rome.
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (2-6-2023). Maria Sibylla Merian. Changing the Nature of Art and Science, Artez Arnhem.
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (30-1-2019). Art Opens the Book of Nature, Universiteit Erfürt, Forschungszentrum Gotha.
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (18-1-2019). Recent Onderzoek, Teyler's Tweede Genootschap, Teyler's Museum, Spaarne, Haarlem.
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (22-11-2018). Art and Knowledge in Dutch Cabinets of Curiosities around 1700, Aarhus University.
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (15-9-2018). Collecting Revolution. Dutch collections of nature in the French period, European Society for the History of Science.
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (25-4-2017). Maria Sibylla Merian en de geschiedenis van het verzamelen, Cromhouthuis. https://www.cromhouthuis.nl/activiteiten/lezing-dr-bert-van-de-roemer-maria-sibylla-merian-en-de-geschiedenis-van-het-verzamelen
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker), Mulder, H. (speaker) & van Andel, T. (speaker) (20-10-2016). Boeksalon Maria Sibylla Merian, Bijzondere Collecties. http://bijzonderecollecties.uva.nl/gedeelde-content/evenementen/evenementen/2016/10/merian-boekensalon.html
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (17-5-2016). Onderzoekspresentatie Cultuurwetenschappen, algemene cultuurwetenschappen.
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (15-4-2016). Frederik Ruysch: scientis or artist?, Museum Vrolik (AMC) & Morbid Anatomy Museum, New York. https://www.amc.nl/web/AMC-website/Museum-Vrolik-EN/The-Amsterdam-Weekend-of-Anatomy-2016.htm
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (14-4-2016). Create. The history of Amsterdam digitally mediated, British Library.
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (30-3-2016). Frederik Ruysch: kunstenaar of wetenschapper?, Academisch Medisch Centrum. https://www.amc.nl/web/AMC-website/Museum-Vrolik-NL/Activiteiten/Gasthuislezing-Frederik-Ruysch-kunstenaar-of-wetenschapper.htm
    • van de Roemer, G. M. (speaker) (30-3-2012). Blikwisselingen. Van oude museumstudies en nieuwe kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit & Museum. Afscheidssymposium Debora Meijers, Teylers Museum, Haarlem.
    • van de Roemer, B. (speaker) (30-9-2010). The Remainder of a Reconstruction: Visualizing Ruysch's Collection, MIT. https://vimeo.com/748388857/8982ad25ae
    • van de Roemer, G. M. (invited speaker) (23-4-2010). The collection of the Academy of Sciences in St. Peterburg c. 1725-1760, its origin and its function, Tagung Das 'Akademische Museum': Universitaere Sammlungen als Raeume der Produktion, Repraesentation und Vermittlung von Wissen, Goettingen.
    • van de Roemer, G. M. (speaker) (22-3-2010). 'Splendor alit. Decorative and cognitive modes in two Dutch cabinets of curiosities from the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century, Kolloquium Herzog August Bibliothek, Wolfenbüttel.

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