Issued as part of the Netherlands' long-running silver five-euro commemorative program, this piece honors the Dutch Golden Age painting tradition — a subject the Dutch mint has returned to repeatedly, reflecting the country's complicated cultural investment in maintaining that 17th-century identity. The "Schilderkunst" (painting) theme was one of several annual releases under Queen Beatrix exploring Dutch artistic heritage.
Mintage was split between a business-strike version sold in cards at post offices and a proof issue in presentation packaging, a distribution model the Dutch mint used consistently during this period to maximize retail reach without inflating collector mintages.
Issued as part of the Netherlands' long-running silver five-euro commemorative program, this piece honors the Dutch Golden Age painting tradition — a subject the Dutch mint has returned to repeatedly, reflecting the country's complicated cultural investment in maintaining that 17th-century identity. The "Schilderkunst" (painting) theme was one of several annual releases under Queen Beatrix exploring Dutch artistic heritage.
Mintage was split between a business-strike version sold in cards at post offices and a proof issue in presentation packaging, a distribution model the Dutch mint used consistently during this period to maximize retail reach without inflating collector mintages.