Laurence Fuller ~ Transient Poems
1616 ~ Night Watch: Delft Riots
Exhibited at the Rijksmuseum on March 12th 2026, after an honorable mention in the Google Gemini Art RemixCompetition, 1616 returns to a moment in European history when the myth makers of their time passed and the hidden prophecies in their stories manifest in the world.
An adaptation of The Night Watch by Rembrandt van Rijn, placing the celebrated civic militia within the unrest surrounding the 1616 Delft corn riots.
Rembrandt’s original painting presents the militia as a confident symbol of civic order ~ a disciplined formation stepping forward beneath the light of mercantile stability. Yet beneath this image of harmony lay a more fragile reality.
In 1616, riots broke out in Delft after authorities imposed a new tax on corn ~ the essential grain upon which daily survival depended. As prices rose and the burden of policy fell upon ordinary citizens and merchants, the agreement between rulers and the ruled began to fracture. The civic guard was called into the streets to stand between the population and the economic decisions of those who governed them. As the stage-managed image of civic stability begins to dissolve into the politics of the street.
Across centuries the pattern repeats. When economic policy presses too heavily on those who sustain a society ~ merchants, workers, and small businesses ~ protest emerges as the language of survival. The unrest in Delft finds echoes in modern movements around the world, including the protests in Iran that began when economic pressures made it increasingly impossible for ordinary citizens to make ends meet.
In this adaptation, Rembrandt’s militia no longer represents unquestioned order. Instead they stand at the threshold between authority and uprising ~ witnesses to the moment when a society realizes that stability itself has become uncertain.
By Laurence Fuller
@laurencefuller
www.laurencefuller.art