Historical Sketch of Art in the Netherlands. By Professor Anton Springer. The traveller who would explore the Netherlands without tak- ing account of the Art Treasures still preserved there, heedlessly disregards a source of the highest gratification. The collections in the cities, as well in Belgium asin Holland, can boast that they include many of the most remarkable creations of the art of a bygone period: works, moreover, which have not found their way hither by mere accident, but grow out of the very soil, so to speak, of these Low Countries, and have their raison détre in the land, in those forms and fashions which to this day repeat themselves alike in the native landscape and in the habits of the people. How much more lively is the impression received from works of art when seen amidst their natural surroundings, is a matter of common and approved experience. Everything that is essentially characteristic in a picture, atmosphere and light, form, whether natural or otherwise, fashion and custom, present them- selves to the beholder. The sources of the artist’s inspiration, all that served to feed his fancy, are clearly manifest; while many a characteristic incident, which would otherwise escape observation or remain altogether unintelligible, receives its requisite inter- pretation. It is true that the esthetic value of individual pictures may be always in all places recognized. A Titian is lustrous even in St. Petersburg; Diirer’s incisive pencil asserts itself in Madrid. Nevertheless the historical significance of Art, the necessary cause of her development, can be understood by those only who will explore the scenes which witnessed her life's first dawn, particu- larly when lapse of time has failed materially to alter the character of such scenes. A distinction which the Netherlands enjoy in common with Italy consists in the opportunity afforded of obtaining the best possible insight into the mysterious quickening of the artistic spirit ; a comprehensive suryey, too, of ait’s earliest promise and maturity, and her identity with the national life. That continuity and many- sidedness of national art, which in Italy is so pronounced, the Nether- lands do not, however, possess. Twice only — once in the 15th, and once in the 17th century — do they furnish remarkable material for the history of modern art. Earlier centuries reveal a poor art life, and the intervals between the two periods referred to fail to make