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Tulipieres for spring: still groundbreaking
Featured in the Financial Times
April 15, 2025

RECENT PUBLICATIONS

Delft Silver

During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the city of Delft boasted a number of flourishing industries in addition to the well known earthenware. There was a cloth industry, breweries, and…

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De Metaale Pot Factory

In a building named “de metalen Poth”, located on the Geer, the present Lange Geer in the city of Delft, the factory arose in 1670 as the last in row…

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The Collection of A.H.H. Van der Burgh

At the end of the nineteenth century, there were very few pieces of Dutch Delftware in museum collections. The most important collections of Delftware objects, both in quantity and in…

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Polychrome Delftware goat butter tubs

De Twee Scheepjes (The Two Little Ships) Factory

De Twee Scheepjes (The Two Little Ships) factory was active since 1619, and flourished especially in the eighteenth century. The factory was located on the south side of the Molslaan.1…

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TEFAF MAASTRICHT

Discover the story behind our monumental 17th-century Delft Flower Pyramid, once in the collection of Cecil Beaton and now acquired by the Cleveland Museum of Art — as featured by TEFAF.

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New collectors have a unique opportunity in the decorative arts to survey an accessible field, find an entry point they’re comfortable with, immerse themselves in research and exploration, and embark on a very enjoyable collecting journey.” — Robert Aronson in an interview for TEFAF Online

OBJECT OF THE MONTH

Commemorative plate Van Speyk

Every month we present you a special object from the Aronson Antiquairs’ collection. This month, we would like to highlight this Commemorative plate with the portrait of Commander J.C.J. van Speyk. Orphaned in his youth, Van Speyk, originally trained to become a tailor, embarked on a seafaring life and gained entry into the Royal Dutch Navy in 1820. Following several years in the East Indies, where he earned the moniker…

Commemorative plate Van Speyk

Every month we present you a special object from the Aronson Antiquairs’ collection. This month, we would like to highlight this Commemorative plate with the portrait of Commander J.C.J. van Speyk. Orphaned in his youth, Van Speyk, originally trained to become a tailor, embarked on a seafaring life and gained entry into the Royal Dutch Navy in 1820. Following several years in the East Indies, where he earned the moniker 'Schrik der roovers,' (fear of the robbers). Van Speyk assumed the role of commander aboard gunboat N2 during the Belgian uprising. 193 years ago, in 1831, this Dutch naval hero J.C.J. van Speyk banged himself into history by detonating his ship. Read more about Van Speyk in our in-depth-article from February 2024.   D2499 Commemorative plate Delft, circa 1831 Attributed to 'De Drie Klokken' (The Three Bells) factory Decorated in the center with a portrait of Commander J.C.J. van Speyk…

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PASSION FOR DELFTWARE

17th & 18th Century Delftware, Unique by Definition

HISTORY
Delftware has been a national symbol of Holland for almost 400 years. Initiated by the demand for the waning importation of Asian porcelain from the 1640s, Delftware quickly became an iconic national product and one of the greatest Dutch achievements.

PRODUCTION
From the 1680s the Delftware industry has constantly innovated with new shapes, decorations and functions. Their products were coveted by European nobility and royalty for their quality and diversity. The city of Delft rapidly became an inspiration to many European and even Asian potters.

COMPANY
Since 1881, over five generations of the Aronson family have brought to market the highest quality Delftware. We confidently ensure that private collectors and museum and corporate curators will discover fully researched authentic Delftware at Aronson Antiquairs in Amsterdam.

MUSEUM COLLECTIONS

VIDEO EXPLANATIONS

With the images, 3D renderings and descriptions of many of our Delftware objects on our collection page you will find explanatory videos. In these short videos Robert Aronson and Céline Ariaans tell more about shapes, decorations, uses, etc. If you find that a subject is under-represented, please let us know.

Robert D. Aronson

Robert Aronson is the fifth-generation director of Aronson Antiquairs and a leading authority on 17th- and 18th-century Dutch Delftware. After beginning his career at Sotheby’s in London, he transformed the family firm into a globally respected gallery, advising museums such as the NGV in Melbourne, The Met in New York, and the Cleveland Museum of Art.

He currently serves, amongst others, as a specialist in European ceramics on the Dutch Antiques Roadshow (Tussen Kunst & Kitsch), as a board member of the Royal Delft Museum, and as an expert within the European Commission’s Cultural Heritage working group. He is also a certified account manager for applied arts with the Dutch Police Academy’s national expertise network (LDM). Formerly Chairman and member of TEFAF’s Executive Committee, three-term chairman of the Royal Dutch Fine Art Dealers Association (KVHOK), and member of a national commission advising the Dutch government on art and antiques, Robert continues to shape the field through scholarship, connoisseurship, and international collaboration.

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