Museum Van
Loon is a museum located in a canalside house alongside the Keizersgracht in
Amsterdam, Netherlands. The museum is named after the family Van Loon that
lived in the house from the 19th century.
History
Van Loon
Gardens
The canal
house where the museum resides was built in 1672, and served as the home of
artist Ferdinand Bol. From 1884 to 1945 the Van Loons lived in the house. Thora
van Loon-Egidius, who lived in the house, was a lady-in-waiting for Wilhelmina
of the Netherlands.
Architecture
and collection
Van Loon
Gardens
The house
was designed in 1672 by Adriaan Dortsman, the famous Dutch architect known for
having created the Ronde Lutherse Kerk. There are four sculptures on top of the
house, representing Ceres, Mars, Minerva and Vulcan.[2] The interior of the
house has been renovated, and appears reminiscent of its look in the
18th-century, with wood paneling and stucco work. The upstairs features several
paintings of Roman sports figures and a bedroom that is decorated with a
Romanticism period painting of Italy. The house also has fake bedroom doors:
the 18th-century owners desired to have symmetry in the interior design so they
painted the real bedroom doors to match the walls and fake doors to appear real
in a location where one would assume a door would be.
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