How Cabinets of Curiosity Shaped Gallery Paintings and Early Art Collections
European cabinet and gallery paintings reveal how private art collections became subjects of paintings themselves, shaping modern museums, curation, and the display of art.
There is something ineffably intimate about “Cabinet of a Collector” (1617): a painting emanating a sense of closeness, as though you have been drawn, alone, into this alcove crammed with beautiful things; on the wall, a dizzying array of images and objects is hung, is yours to reach out and touch. Desiccated creatures from far-off seas are pinned over loose sketches and between paintings of lush, deep-set landscapes. In shadow boxes, small animal forms catch light alongside piles of coins, classical profiles glinting. In a feat of forced perspective, gleaming shells and shark’s teeth jut off the table toward you. They look heavy and cool to the touch. The spread is a daze—a visual feast.
But to its right, through an open doorway, there is something stranger going on: Another collection, this one lying in disarray. A globe, a lute, a broken statue; books and a painter’s palette. Several swaggering figures stand over the mess, bats raised up above their impassive, long-eared donkey heads.
Put aside our ass-headed antagonists for just a moment. The space that Flemish painter Frans Francken the Younger has welcomed us into is a “collector’s cabinet,” an accretion that shares features of the gallery and the reference library and precedes the modern sense of both. Cabinets (in German, Wunderkammern or Kunstkammern) reflect a private collector’s sensibility very much of its time in the 16th and 17th centuries. Their assemblage of precious natural and manmade objects was meant to be beautiful, rarified, and intellectually stimulating all at once.
Both quasi-encyclopedic and essentially aesthetic, early collectors’ cabinets maintained no real line between the natural and the unnatural, the secular and the religious. Insofar as an organizing principle existed, it was to maximize impact by playing dissimilar objects off each other. The desired effect “was one of cornucopia-like bounty and startling variety, a visual tribute to the exuberant creativity of nature and art,” writes science historian Lorraine Daston. The natural philosophy of the day was capacious enough to include everything that would later crystallize into the distinct fields of the arts, sciences, and theology. Kunstkammer’s contents were for study broadly construed—a stage for contemplation, in the most general sense of the word. The space was also a way of showcasing the collector’s connoisseurship, wealth, and discernment. Owning naturalia, scientific instruments, and fine art, writes scholar Marlise Rijks, signaled possession of “the knowledge these objects stood for.” The earliest known image of a cabinet was a 1599 woodcut illustrating the natural history collection of the Neapolitan apothecary Ferrante Imperato, with Italian connoisseurs pointing out specimens gathered from across the world.
As the 17th century progressed, meticulously detailed images of sumptuous Kunstkammern became a genre in their own right. One of the finest examples is Italian painter Domenico Remps’ “Cabinet of Curiosities,” which dates to the 1690s and offers a glimpse of the spectacle served up by a tastefully cluttered collection. A literal cabinet, executed in stunning trompe-l’oeil, teems with crimson coral and feathers, tiny paintings, and intricate ivory sculptures. Polished glass jockeys for attention with a gleaming Hercules beetle and a stained, empty-eyed human skull.
Many cabinet paintings reflect displays that never existed as such. Artists are thought to have selected examples from their own collections (as may be the case for some of the Francken paintings) or from the broader holdings of a commissioning patron. They pieced together these references into opulent still lifes, compositions of which elicit acts of connoisseurship, a demonstration of taste and knowledge, and a moment of collection itself.
The virtues embodied by the Kunstkammer and its representations of erudition, taste, wealth, and connections help to explain the presence of our donkey-headed philistines. The metaphor is simple enough: Within sight of the collection, we see metonymies of the liberal arts crushed under the foot and cudgel of that enduring symbol of ignorance, the ass. As materiality and idolatry debates of the Protestant Reformation raged across the 16th century, not only regarding religious imagery, but, in some cases, visual art in general came under fire. At the same time, religiously inspired apprehension about material wealth was directed against both luxurious collections (a fad in the Low Countries and beyond) and images that seemed to promote opulence. With their equine iconoclasts, the Franckens were taking a strong stance as “defenders of the image,” making a visual case that the reformers’ rejection of art threatened the liberal arts more generally.
The Francken workshop would repeat the “anes iconoclastes” trope across several paintings that are always in association with the cabinet, such as “A Collector’s Cabinet” (1619) and a 17th-century image of a malcontent donkey preparing to bludgeon the learned; for the Franckens, the issue was both personal and painfully current. In addition to pioneering the cabinet painting genre, the Francken family played an active role in the Antwerp Counter-Reformation, leaving a written record of their discontent during the Silent Iconoclasm of the late 16th century and sequestering religious images and objects at home for safekeeping.
As the 17th century progressed, collectors’ cabinets became increasingly specialized. More and more, rooms were filled with art alone, without an accompaniment of exotic naturalia. Rijks describes this as an ambiguous development for the visual arts, noting how “that outcome was both a victory, in that the collecting of art was considered valuable for its own sake, and a defeat, in that art played a decreasing importance as a transmitter of knowledge.” In a kind of escalating aesthetic spiral, these early galleries attracted artistic attention in their own right as “paintings of paintings, art of art.” Essentially, Antwerp had become the epicenter of an expanding array of lush meta-images.
Representations of curiosity cabinets, gallery images were not always faithful depictions of actual collections. Rather, the artworks—both real or sometimes entirely contrived—were brought together for the first time on the canvas (a curatorial act in itself), often in the service of allegory. For example, in Peter Paul Rubens’ “The Sense of Sight” (1617), the figures of Venus and Cupid are juxtaposed with a jumble of art and scientific implements, symbolizing a wide-ranging reflection on the meaning of sight itself. Here, we find a version of “The Ecstasy of Saint Cecilia” by Raphael (1514–17) and Rubens’ own “The Tiger Hunt” (1615–16) amid neoclassical busts, a monkey contemplating a seascape, and other curio clutter.
In his mid-18th century painting “The Artist’s Studio,” Austrian painter Johann Georg Platzer depicts himself at the center of a workshop cluttered with images that allude to his well-known works, such as “The Pleasures of the Seasons” (1730) and “Spring” (pre-1761), alongside motifs from the history of art, as depicted in Aesop’s “The Satyr and the Peasant.” In the piece, Platzer illustrates assistants, students, a nude model, and a visiting collector disappearing in a busy forest of images. Taken together, the most prominent of the paintings form an allegory of the five senses.
Between about 1754 and 1757, Italian painter and architect Giovanni Paolo Panini executed a series of four nearly identical yet purely fantastical galleries of classical ruins. While sculptures like the famous Laocoön Group are real, the paintings and the gallery are fictions, offering a travel guide to the must-see Roman ruins of the Pantheon, Colosseum, and Piazza Navona; snapshots from the Grand Tour in a grand memory palace; and Panini’s patron, a French diplomat, pictured holding a guidebook.
On the whole, however, gallery images were rather rooted in reality, serving as visual inventories of painted indices of ownership and display. The Flemish painter Willem van Haecht made a name for himself by painting galleries, including “Interior of the Salon of the Archduchess Isabella of Austria” (1621), in which he captures the duchess sitting amid her collection in searing daylight, each frame illuminated in hyperreal detail. Her entourage confer over a table of astronomical instruments and point out painted details (in contrast to later gallery paintings, where science will be fully hived off from art). Two tropical birds are arranged nearby like one more work of art, while a tiny chained monkey confronts a lap dog. Van Haecht’s 1628 re-creation of the merchant Cornelis van der Geest’s collection is on another order of magnitude, showing over two dozen characters crowded in, dwarfed by an array of paintings nearly three stories high.
In his decade-long effort to catalog the collection of his patron Archduke Leopold Wilhelm, Flemish artist David Teniers the Younger produced a series of gallery paintings almost interchangeable but for their selection of artworks. Each is staged in identical (or nearly identical) rooms. When the walls run out of space, Teniers props up frames on the floor, leans them against each other, and suspends them from the ceiling, with each image captured in precise, documentary-like detail. Teniers’ patron Wilhelm appears in every iteration, picking his way through the forest of paintings with a long, thin cane, and his entourage always near.
In the 1770s, German artist Johan Zoffany’s “Tribuna of the Uffizi” painting takes on perhaps the most famous gallery in the Florentine museum, depicting an octagonal room whose display has been said to reflect the sensibilities of the Wunderkammer. No clear message emerges from Zoffany’s congeries of art, though he pulled some from other galleries in the sprawling complex. Nonetheless, if the painting symbolizes anything, it may simply be analyzed as an allusion to the richness of the Uffizi. Teeming with the powdered coifs and shiny breeches of visiting British aficionados, the art cluttering both the red wall of the room and heaped onto multicolored rugs on the floor gives the visual effect of a dragon’s horde.
Increasingly, these paintings recorded the scene of specific, dated exhibitions and named galleries. Later generations of artists, including Italian engraver Pietro Antonio Martini and French painter François Joseph Heim, made careers recording (in faithful detail) the exhibits of great museums like the Louvre. More than a century later, painter Enrico Meneghelli captured the interiors of American galleries like the Boston Athenaeum: somber, dimly lit spaces often empty of any spectators. Some works are tours de force of artistic talent, as the oil paint captures not just the displays, but also the soaring arches and columns of gallery spaces. Meanwhile, etchings dense with cross-hatching and stippling conjured up easily reproducible copies of well-traveled exhibits. Taking creative liberties by adding or subtracting works at the engraver’s discretion would have defeated the purpose; the effort is almost a journalistic report for an absent audience.
The presence of an engrossed audience is almost ubiquitous across the diverse paintings of paintings in Europe and beyond, images of which traced interesting times. Gallery paintings witnessed the birth of the art museum and the long, slow democratization of art. At one point, the term “cabinet” carried a powerful connotation of privacy and authority in that if beautiful images or objects were stored in this masculine heart of the home, vanishingly few people would ever lay eyes on them. Outside of the head of household—namely, the collector himself—only those personally invited would have been admitted to marvel and meditate. However, over time, collections and their audiences radically expanded: No longer were private homes and religious buildings the only repositories for fine art. Instead, museums and salons played host to an increasingly sundry crowd.
In later examples of the gallery painting, the flocks of art-lovers gesturing up at the walls swell almost comically, and the artworks seem to dwindle in importance. The handful of visitors featured in earlier paintings of paintings (perhaps just the collector, his family, a few esteemed guests, and, in some cases, the commissioned artist himself) are displaced by distended, disorderly masses. Dozens, if not hundreds, of eager visitors fill the paintings of Martini and Heim. In 1824, Heim captured “Charles X Distributing Awards to Artists” at a Louvre salon, painting the teeming crowd of over a hundred well-heeled figures in luminescent white and black. The crowd easily outnumbers the paintings that hulk behind them in shadow, and few people look upward to take in the display. In his 1790s work “The Art Gallery of Josephus Augustinus Brentano,” Dutch painter Adriaan de Lelie captures guests at an art collector’s opulent Amsterdam home. A dim shaft of light picks out Brentano and his company’s expressions of focus as they pore over his latest purchases, largely missing the paintings themselves, whose details are left in hazy smudges.
The pairing of illegible images and an absorbed (or distracted) crowd recalls an argument by the philosopher and cultural critic Walter Benjamin. In his 1935 essay, “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,” Benjamin writes that we experience art between the two poles of “distraction and concentration.” He appeals to the old, enlightened ideal of art viewership as something private, personal, and introspective, stating, “A man who concentrates before a work of art is absorbed by it. In contrast, the distracted mass absorbs the work of art.” Benjamin finds within the realms of film and photography—specifically, in the mass consumption of art through mechanical reproduction—the peril of distraction, passive diversion, and ready-made opinion.
He speaks of the “aura” of the original through its authenticity, uniqueness, and historical “presence in time and space.” Copies can both bring us closer and more people closer to an artwork, but its aura cannot be faithfully reproduced. For Benjamin, the aura is rooted in an artwork’s “cult value,” which recalls the ritual significance of the cult object: the religious import of the cloistered icon, the gravity of the unapproachable, the inaccessible, and even the private curiosity cabinet, shuttered away in a domestic home. With time, and with secularization, the artwork becomes recognizable, ceasing to be “first and foremost, an instrument of magic” in exchange for accruing “exhibition value” instead—namely, the artwork as spectacle.
“Paintings of paintings” sit somewhere in the middle of these binaries, allowing us to detect the faultlines of Benjamin’s crisis far earlier in history. Since there has been art, there has been a will and a way to reproduce it as paintings of paintings, drawings of drawings, and intaglio prints of intaglio prints. Depicting scenes of exhibition and distracted consumption, gallery paintings nevertheless have a cult value of their own. While they cannot reproduce the experience of standing before the works that they copy, one can experience a gallery painting as an artwork in its own right. They come from an age of manual reproduction, yet somehow anticipate the philosophical questions that the emergence of film and photography will spawn.
In today’s world of limitless digital duplicates, museums are still filled, and only the truly asinine iconoclast would oppose the accessibility of art on the Internet. In the painted cabinet and painted gallery (and in the world of online art), questions of authenticity and aura linger (to say nothing of distraction and passivity). But to the challenges of crowds and copies—alongside the immanent concern of the artificial—rises the redemptive quality of curation, selection, and arrangement. Though stocked with copies and reproductions, cabinet paintings are works in their own right with an aura all of their own. And within the modern-day intimate online spaces of digital curation, perhaps there are cabinets of curiosity still to be found.

