The English coffee house in Amsterdam, with people trading shares; with vignettes showing the rise and fall of the share price boom of 1720. Etching, ca. 1720.
- Date:
- [1720?]
- Reference:
- 812076i
- Part of:
- Groote tafereel der dwaasheid.
- Pictures
About this work
Description
The central image shows men trading shares in the English coffee house in Amsterdam (nicknamed Quinquenpoix after the location of the stock exchange in Paris). On the left, a woman refuses a waiter who asks for coffee from her large pot; in the foreground, a woman sits on a bench selling gingerbread-nuts from a large pot, a man offers eggs for sale, saying "better than shares"; a Savoyard boy carries a magic-lantern on his back, a sailor offers English red herrings from two baskets, and three men sit at a table; beyond, stock-brokers and investors flock into the room
Four vignettes in the corners of the print depict the rise and fall of the shareholders. Top left, 'The heyday of the shareholders' (men crowd outside a house congratulating themselves on their profits from share dealing); bottom left, 'The fall of the shareholders' (men bemoan their losses, one falling from the top of a ladder which another begins to climb); top right, 'The exodus of the shareholders' (investors and their families embark on a ship to sail for the East Indies and a Dutch sailor wishes them well); bottom right 'The return of clean business' (Minerva works at her loom, as worthwhile industry returns to the Netherlands).
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Lettering
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Location Status Access Closed stores