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Rembrandt

Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (/ˈrɛmbrænt, ˈrɛmbrɑːnt/,[2] Dutch: [ˈrɛmbrɑnt ˈɦɑrmə(n)ˌsoːɱ vɑn ˈrɛin] ; 15 July 1606[1] – 4 October 1669), usually simply known as Rembrandt, was a Dutch Golden Age painter, printmaker, and draughtsman. An innovative and prolific master in three media,[3] he is generally considered one of the greatest visual artists in the history of art.[4] It is estimated Rembrandt produced a total of about three hundred paintings, three hundred etchings, and two thousand drawings.

Rembrandt
Born
Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn

(1606-07-15)15 July 1606[1]
Died4 October 1669(1669-10-04) (aged 63)
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic
EducationJacob van Swanenburg
Pieter Lastman
Known forPainting, printmaking, drawing
Notable workSelf-portraits
The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp (1632)
Belshazzar's Feast
The Night Watch (1642)
The Hundred Guilder Print (etching, c. 1647–1649)
Bathsheba at Her Bath (1654)
Syndics of the Drapers' Guild (1662)
MovementDutch Golden Age
Baroque
Spouse
(m. 1634; died 1642)
ChildrenTitus and Cornelia
Signature

Unlike most Dutch masters of the 17th century, Rembrandt's works depict a wide range of styles and subject matter, from portraits and self-portraits to landscapes, genre scenes, allegorical and historical scenes, biblical and mythological themes and animal studies. His contributions to art came in a period of great wealth and cultural and scientific achievement that historians call the Dutch Golden Age, when Dutch art (especially Dutch painting) was prolific and innovative.

Rembrandt never went abroad but was considerably influenced by the work of the Italian Old Masters and Dutch and Flemish artists who had studied in Italy. After he achieved youthful success as a portrait painter, Rembrandt's later years were marked by personal tragedy and financial hardships. Yet his etchings and paintings were popular throughout his lifetime, his reputation as an artist remained high,[5] and for twenty years he taught many important Dutch painters.[6]

Rembrandt's portraits of his contemporaries, self-portraits and illustrations of scenes from the Bible are regarded as his greatest creative triumphs. His 40 self-portraits form an intimate autobiography.[4] Rembrandt's foremost contribution in the history of printmaking was his transformation of the etching process from a relatively new reproductive technique into an art form.[7][8] His reputation as the greatest etcher in the history of the medium was established in his lifetime.

Early life and education edit

 
The Prodigal Son in the Brothel, a self-portrait with Saskia van Uylenburgh (c. 1635)
 
Rembrandt's portrait of Saskia van Uylenburgh (c. 1635)

Rembrandt[a] Harmenszoon van Rijn was born on 15 July 1606 in Leiden,[1] in the Dutch Republic, now the Netherlands. He was the ninth child born to Harmen Gerritszoon van Rijn and Neeltgen Willemsdochter van Zuijtbrouck.[10] His family was quite well-to-do; his father was a miller and his mother was a baker's daughter. His mother was Catholic, and his father belonged to the Dutch Reformed Church. Religion is a central theme in Rembrandt's works and the religiously fraught period in which he lived makes his faith a matter of interest.

As a boy, he attended a Latin school. At the age of 13, he was enrolled at the University of Leiden, although according to a contemporary he had a greater inclination towards painting; he was soon apprenticed to Jacob van Swanenburg, with whom he spent three years.[11] After a brief but important apprenticeship of six months with the history painter Pieter Lastman in Amsterdam, Rembrandt stayed a few months with Jacob Pynas and then started his own workshop, though Simon van Leeuwen claimed that Joris van Schooten taught Rembrandt in Leiden.[11][12]

Career edit

 
Rembrandt lived at Amstel river almost next to Kloveniersdoelen where the Night Watch was exhibited for years; painting by Jan Ekels the Elder (1775)
 
Rembrandt's house at Jodenbreestraat by Cornelis Springer (1853); in the back the Zuiderkerk where his children were buried

In 1624 or 1625, Rembrandt opened a studio in Leiden, which he shared with friend and colleague Jan Lievens. In 1627, Rembrandt began to accept students, among them Gerrit Dou and Isaac de Jouderville.[13] Joan Huydecoper is mentioned as the first buyer of a Rembrandt painting in 1628.[14] In 1629, Rembrandt was discovered by the statesman Constantijn Huygens who procured for Rembrandt important commissions from the court of The Hague. As a result of this connection, Prince Frederik Hendrik continued to purchase paintings from Rembrandt.[15]

At the end of 1631, Rembrandt moved to Amsterdam, a city rapidly expanding as the business and trade capital. He began to practice as a professional portraitist for the first time, with great success. He initially stayed with an art dealer, Hendrick van Uylenburgh, and in 1634, married Hendrick's cousin, Saskia van Uylenburgh.[16][17] Saskia came from a respected family: her father Rombertus was a lawyer and had been burgomaster (mayor) of Leeuwarden. The couple married in the local church of St. Annaparochie without the presence of Rembrandt's relatives.[18] In the same year, Rembrandt became a citizen of Amsterdam and a member of the local guild of painters. He also acquired a number of students, among them Ferdinand Bol and Govert Flinck.[19]

In 1635, Rembrandt and Saskia rented a fashionable lodging with a view of the river Amstel.[20] In 1639 they moved to a large and recently modernized house in the upscale 'Breestraat' with artists and art dealers; Nicolaes Pickenoy, a portrait painter was his neighbor. The mortgage to finance the 13,000 guilder purchase would be a cause for later financial difficulties.[b][19] The neighborhood sheltered many immigrants and was becoming the Jewish quarter. It was there that Rembrandt frequently sought his Jewish neighbors to model for his Old Testament scenes.[23] One of his great patrons at early age was Amsterdam statesman Andries de Graeff.[24][25]

Although they were by now affluent, the couple suffered several personal setbacks; three children died within weeks of their births.[c][d] Only their fourth child, Titus, who was born in 1641, survived into adulthood. Saskia died in 1642, probably from tuberculosis. Rembrandt's drawings of her on her sick and death bed are among his most moving works.[27][20] After Saskia's illness, the widow Geertje Dircx was hired as Titus' caretaker and dry nurse; at some time, she also became Rembrandt's lover. In May 1649 she left and charged Rembrandt with breach of promise and asked to be awarded alimony.[19] Rembrandt tried to settle the matter amicably, but to pay her lawyer she pawned the diamond ring he had given her that once belonged to Saskia. On 14 October they came to an agreement; the court particularly stated that Rembrandt had to pay a yearly maintenance allowance, provided that Titus remained her only heir and she sold none of Rembrandt's possessions.[28][29] As Dircx broke her promise, she was committed to a women's house of correction at Gouda in August 1650.[30] Rembrandt paid for the costs.[31][e]

In early 1649, Rembrandt began a relationship with the 23-year-old Hendrickje Stoffels, who had initially been his maid. She may have been the cause of Geertje's leaving. In 1654 Rembrandt produced a controversial nude Bathsheba at Her Bath. In June Hendrickje received three summonses from the Reformed Church to answer the charge "that she had committed the acts of a whore with Rembrandt the painter". In July she admitted her guilt and was banned from receiving communion.[32] Rembrandt was not summoned to appear for the Church council.[33] In October they had a daughter, Cornelia. Had he remarried he would have lost access to a trust set up for Titus in Saskia's will.[27]

Insolvency edit

 
Rembrandt's son Titus painted as a Franciscan monk (1660)
 
Rembrandt moved to Rozengracht 184, Stadsarchief Amsterdam
 
Sketch The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis, October 1661 or later

Rembrandt, despite his artistic success, found himself in financial turmoil. His penchant for acquiring art, prints, and rare items led him to live beyond his means. In January 1653 the sale of the property formally was finalized but Rembrandt still had to cover half of the remaining mortgage. Creditors began pressing for installments but Rembrandt, facing financial strain, sought a postponement. The house required repairs prompting Rembrandt to borrow money from friends, including Jan Six.[34][f]

In November 1655, Rembrandt's son Titus, then just 14 years old, made a will that named his father as the sole heir, effectively excluding his mother's family.[37][38] In December of that year, Rembrandt organized a sale of his paintings, but the proceeds fell short of expectations.[39] This was a challenging period marked by a plague outbreak that also affected the art business. As a result, Rembrandt applied for a high court arrangement (known as cessio bonorum).[40]

Despite the financial difficulties, Rembrandt's bankruptcy wasn't forced; rather, he seemed to have orchestrated it, possibly to create room for marriage to his beloved Hendrickje.[39][41] In July 1656, he declared his insolvency, taking stock and willingly surrendered his assets.[42] Notably, he had already transferred the house to his son.[22] Both the authorities and his creditors showed leniency, granting him ample time to settle his debts. Jacob J. Hinlopen obviously played a role.[43]

In November 1657 another auction was held to sell his paintings, as well as a substantial number of etching plates and drawings, some by renowned artists such as Raphael, Mantegna and Giorgione.[g] Remarkably, Rembrandt was permitted to retain his tools as a means of generating income.[22] Rembrandt lost the guardianship of his son and thus control over his actions. A new guardian, Louis Crayers, claimed the house in settlement of Titus’s debt.[44]

The sale list comprising 363 items offers insight into Rembrandt's diverse collections, which, encompassed Old Master paintings, drawings, Roman emperors busts, Greek philosophers statues, books (a bible), two globes, bonnets, armor, and various objects from Asia (chinaware), as well as a collections of natural history specimens (two lion skins, a bird-of-paradise, corals and minerals).[45] Unfortunately, the prices realized in the sale were disappointing.[46]

By February 1658, Rembrandt' house was sold at a foreclosure auction, and the family moved to more modest lodgings at Rozengracht.[47] In 1660, he finished Ahasuerus and Haman at the feast of Esther which he sold to Jan J. Hinlopen.[48] Early December 1660, the sale of the house was finalized but the proceeds went directly to Titus' guardian.[49][50]

Two weeks later, Hendrickje and Titus established a dummy corporation as art dealers, allowing Rembrandt, who had board and lodging, to continue his artistic pursuits.[51][52] In 1661, they secured a contract for a major project at the newly completed town hall. The resulting work, The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis, was rejected by the mayors and returned to the painter within a few weeks; the surviving fragment (in Stockholm) is only a quarter of the original.[53]

Despite these setbacks, Rembrandt continued to receive significant portrait commissions and completed notable works, such as the Sampling Officials in 1662.[54] It remains a challenge to gauge Rembrandt's wealth accurately as he may may overestimated the value of his art collection.[42] Nonetheless, half of his assets were earmarked for Titus' inheritance.[55]

In March 1663, with Hendrickje's illness, Titus assumed a more prominent role. Isaac van Hertsbeeck, Rembrandt's primary creditor, went to the High Court and contestested Titus' priority for payment, leading to legal battles that Titus ultimately won in 1665 when he came of age.[56][57][58] During this time, Rembrandt worked on notable pieces like the Jewish Bride and his final self-portraits but struggled with rent arrears.[59] Notably, Cosimo III de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, visited Rembrandt twice, and returned to Florence with one of the self-portraits.[60]

Rembrandt outlived both Hendrickje and Titus; he passed away on Friday 4 October 1669; he was buried four days later in a rented grave in the Westerkerk. His heirs paid a substantial amount of money, suggesting his relative wealth at the time.[61] His illegitimate child, Cornelia (1654–1684), eventually moved to Batavia in 1670 accompanied by an obscure painter and her mother's inheritance.[62] Titus' considerable inheritance passed to his only grandchild, Titia (1669-1715) who never married and lived at Blauwburgwal.[63] In summary, Rembrandt's life was marked by more than just artistic achievements; he navigated numerous legal and financial challenges, leaving a complex legacy.[64] Rembrandt did have a tendency to push the legal limits.”[65]

Works edit

 
Rembrandt's only known seascape, The Storm on the Sea of Galilee (1633), is still missing after the robbery from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990.
 
A Polish Nobleman (1637)
 
Rembrandt only Winterlandscape 1646

In a letter to Huygens, Rembrandt offered the only surviving explanation of what he sought to achieve through his art, writing that, "the greatest and most natural movement", translated from de meeste en de natuurlijkste beweegelijkheid. The word "beweegelijkheid" translates to "emotion" or "motive". Whether this refers to objectives, material, or something else, is not known but critics have drawn particular attention to the way Rembrandt seamlessly melded the earthly and spiritual.[66]

Earlier 20th century connoisseurs claimed Rembrandt had produced well over 600 paintings,[67] nearly 400 etchings and 2,000 drawings.[68] More recent scholarship, from the 1960s to the present day (led by the Rembrandt Research Project), often controversially, has winnowed his oeuvre to nearer 300 paintings.[h] His prints, traditionally all called etchings, although many are produced in whole or part by engraving and sometimes drypoint, have a much more stable total of slightly under 300.[i] It is likely Rembrandt made many more drawings in his lifetime than 2,000 but those extant are more rare than presumed.[j] Two experts claim that the number of drawings whose autograph status can be regarded as effectively "certain" is no higher than about 75, although this is disputed. The list was to be unveiled at a scholarly meeting in February 2010.[71]

At one time, approximately 90 paintings were counted as Rembrandt self-portraits but it is now known that he had his students copy his own self-portraits as part of their training. Modern scholarship has reduced the autograph count to over forty paintings, as well as a few drawings and thirty-one etchings, which include many of the most remarkable images of the group.[72] Some show him posing in quasi-historical fancy dress, or pulling faces at himself. His oil paintings trace the progress from an uncertain young man, through the dapper and very successful portrait-painter of the 1630s, to the troubled but massively powerful portraits of his old age. Together they give a remarkably clear picture of the man, his appearance and his psychological make-up, as revealed by his richly weathered face.[k]

In his portraits and self-portraits, he angles the sitter's face in such a way that the ridge of the nose nearly always forms the line of demarcation between brightly illuminated and shadowy areas. A Rembrandt face is a face partially eclipsed; and the nose, bright and obvious, thrusting into the riddle of halftones, serves to focus the viewer's attention upon, and to dramatize, the division between a flood of light—an overwhelming clarity—and a brooding duskiness.[73]

In a number of biblical works, including The Raising of the Cross, Joseph Telling His Dreams, and The Stoning of Saint Stephen, Rembrandt painted himself as a character in the crowd. Durham suggests that this was because the Bible was for Rembrandt "a kind of diary, an account of moments in his own life".[74]

Among the more prominent characteristics of Rembrandt's work are his use of chiaroscuro, the theatrical employment of light and shadow derived from Caravaggio, or, more likely, from the Dutch Caravaggisti but adapted for very personal means.[75] Also notable are his dramatic and lively presentation of subjects, devoid of the rigid formality that his contemporaries often displayed, and a deeply felt compassion for mankind, irrespective of wealth and age. His immediate family—his wife Saskia, his son Titus and his common-law wife Hendrickje—often figured prominently in his paintings, many of which had mythical, biblical or historical themes.

Periods, themes and styles edit

 
The Abduction of Europa (1632) has been described as "...a shining example of the 'golden age' of Baroque painting".[76]
 
Portrait of Haesje Jacobsdr. van Cleyburg from Rotterdam (1634) completed during the height of his commercial success
 
Rembrandt van Rijn – Self-Portrait with a flat cap (1642) Royal Collection
 
Self Portrait (1658), now housed in the Frick Collection in New York City, has been described as "the calmest and grandest of all his portraits".[77]

Throughout his career, Rembrandt took as his primary subjects the themes of portraiture, landscape and narrative painting. For the last, he was especially praised by his contemporaries, who extolled him as a masterly interpreter of biblical stories for his skill in representing emotions and attention to detail.[78] Stylistically, his paintings progressed from the early "smooth" manner, characterized by fine technique in the portrayal of illusionistic form, to the late "rough" treatment of richly variegated paint surfaces, which allowed for an illusionism of form suggested by the tactile quality of the paint itself. Rembrandt must have realized that if he kept the paint deliberately loose and "paint-like" on some parts of the canvas, the perception of space became much greater.[79]

A parallel development may be seen in Rembrandt's skill as a printmaker. In the etchings of his maturity, particularly from the late 1640s onward, the freedom and breadth of his drawings and paintings found expression in the print medium as well. The works encompass a wide range of subject matter and technique, sometimes leaving large areas of white paper to suggest space, at other times employing complex webs of line to produce rich dark tones.[80]

Lastman's influence on Rembrandt was most prominent during his period in Leiden from 1625 to 1631.[81] Paintings were rather small but rich in details (for example, in costumes and jewelry). Religious and allegorical themes were favored, as were tronies.[81] In 1626 Rembrandt produced his first etchings, the wide dissemination of which would largely account for his international fame.[81] In 1629 he completed Judas Repentant, Returning the Pieces of Silver and The Artist in His Studio, works that evidence his interest in the handling of light and variety of paint application, and constitute the first major progress in his development as a painter.[82]

During his early years in Amsterdam (1632–1636), Rembrandt began to paint dramatic biblical and mythological scenes in high contrast and of large format (The Blinding of Samson, 1636, Belshazzar's Feast, c. 1635 Danaë, 1636 but reworked later), seeking to emulate the baroque style of Rubens.[83] With the occasional help of assistants in Uylenburgh's workshop, he painted numerous portrait commissions both small (Jacob de Gheyn III) and large (Portrait of the Shipbuilder Jan Rijcksen and his Wife, 1633, Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp, 1632).[84]

By the late 1630s, Rembrandt had produced a few paintings and many etchings of landscapes. Often these landscapes highlighted natural drama, featuring uprooted trees and ominous skies (Cottages before a Stormy Sky, c. 1641; The Three Trees, 1643). From 1640 his work became less exuberant and more sober in tone, possibly reflecting personal tragedy. Biblical scenes were now derived more often from the New Testament than the Old Testament, as had been the case before. In 1642 he painted The Night Watch, the most substantial of the important group portrait commissions which he received in this period, and through which he sought to find solutions to compositional and narrative problems that had been attempted in previous works.[85]

In the decade following the Night Watch, Rembrandt's paintings varied greatly in size, subject, and style. The previous tendency to create dramatic effects primarily by strong contrasts of light and shadow gave way to the use of frontal lighting and larger and more saturated areas of color. Simultaneously, figures came to be placed parallel to the picture plane. These changes can be seen as a move toward a classical mode of composition and, considering the more expressive use of brushwork as well, may indicate a familiarity with Venetian art (Susanna and the Elders, 1637–47).[86] At the same time, there was a marked decrease in painted works in favor of etchings and drawings of landscapes.[87] In these graphic works natural drama eventually made way for quiet Dutch rural scenes.

In the 1650s, Rembrandt's style changed again. Colors became richer and brush strokes more pronounced. With these changes, Rembrandt distanced himself from earlier work and current fashion, which increasingly inclined toward fine, detailed works. His use of light becomes more jagged and harsh, and shine becomes almost nonexistent. His singular approach to paint application may have been suggested in part by familiarity with the work of Titian, and could be seen in the context of the then current discussion of 'finish' and surface quality of paintings. Contemporary accounts sometimes remark disapprovingly of the coarseness of Rembrandt's brushwork, and the artist himself was said to have dissuaded visitors from looking too closely at his paintings.[88] The tactile manipulation of paint may hearken to medieval procedures, when mimetic effects of rendering informed a painting's surface. The result is a richly varied handling of paint, deeply layered and often apparently haphazard, which suggests form and space in both an illusory and highly individual manner.[89]

In later years, biblical themes were often depicted but emphasis shifted from dramatic group scenes to intimate portrait-like figures (James the Apostle, 1661). In his last years, Rembrandt painted his most deeply reflective self-portraits (from 1652 to 1669 he painted fifteen), and several moving images of both men and women (The Jewish Bride, c. 1666)—in love, in life, and before God.[90][91]

Graphic works edit

 
The Hundred Guilder Print (c. 1647–49), an etching now housed in the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo
 
The Three Trees (1643)
 
The Shell (a cone snail) is the only known still life Rembrandt ever etched.

Rembrandt produced etchings for most of his career, from 1626 to 1660, when he was forced to sell his printing-press and practically abandoned etching. Only the troubled year of 1649 produced no dated work.[92] He took easily to etching and, though he learned to use a burin and partly engraved many plates, the freedom of etching technique was fundamental to his work. He was very closely involved in the whole process of printmaking, and must have printed at least early examples of his etchings himself. At first he used a style based on drawing but soon moved to one based on painting, using a mass of lines and numerous bitings with the acid to achieve different strengths of line. Towards the end of the 1630s, he reacted against this manner and moved to a simpler style, with fewer bitings.[93] He worked on the so-called Hundred Guilder Print in stages throughout the 1640s, and it was the "critical work in the middle of his career", from which his final etching style began to emerge.[94] Although the print only survives in two states, the first very rare, evidence of much reworking can be seen underneath the final print and many drawings survive for elements of it.[95]

In the mature works of the 1650s, Rembrandt was more ready to improvise on the plate and large prints typically survive in several states, up to eleven, often radically changed. He now used hatching to create his dark areas, which often take up much of the plate. He also experimented with the effects of printing on different kinds of paper, including Japanese paper, which he used frequently, and on vellum. He began to use "surface tone," leaving a thin film of ink on parts of the plate instead of wiping it completely clean to print each impression. He made more use of drypoint, exploiting, especially in landscapes, the rich fuzzy burr that this technique gives to the first few impressions.[96]

His prints have similar subjects to his paintings, although the 27 self-portraits are relatively more common, and portraits of other people less so. The landscapes, mostly small, largely set the course for the graphic treatment of landscape until the end of the 19th century. Of the many hundreds of drawings Rembrandt made, only about two hundred have a landscape motif as their subject, and of the approximately three hundred etchings, about thirty show a landscape. As for his painted landscapes, one does not even get beyond eight works.[97] One third of his etchings are of religious subjects, many treated with a homely simplicity, whilst others are his most monumental prints. A few erotic, or just obscene, compositions have no equivalent in his paintings.[98] He owned, until forced to sell it, a magnificent collection of prints by other artists, and many borrowings and influences in his work can be traced to artists as diverse as Mantegna, Raphael, Hercules Seghers, and Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione.

Drawings by Rembrandt and his pupils/followers have been extensively studied by many artists and scholars[l] through the centuries. His original draughtsmanship has been described as an individualistic art style that was very similar to East Asian old masters, most notably Chinese masters:[105] a "combination of formal clarity and calligraphic vitality in the movement of pen or brush that is closer to Chinese painting in technique and feeling than to anything in European art before the twentieth century".[106]

Asian inspiration edit

 
Rembrandt's drawing of an Indian Mughal painting
 
Self-Portrait with Raised Sabre (c. 1634)

Rembrandt was interested in Mughal miniatures, especially around the 1650s. He drew versions of some 23 Mughal paintings and may have owned an album of them. These miniatures include paintings of Shah Jahan, Akbar, Jahangir and Dara Shikoh and may have influenced the costumes and other aspects of his works.[107][108][109][110]

The Night Watch edit

 
The Night Watch or The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq (1642), an oil on canvas portrait now housed in Rijksmuseum

Rembrandt painted The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq between 1640 and 1642, which became his most famous work.[111] This picture was called De Nachtwacht by the Dutch and The Night Watch by Sir Joshua Reynolds because by 1781 the picture was so dimmed and defaced that it was almost indistinguishable, and it looked quite like a night scene. After it was cleaned, it was discovered to represent broad day—a party of 18 musketeers stepping from a gloomy courtyard into the blinding sunlight. For Théophile Thoré it was the prettiest painting in the world.

The piece was commissioned for the new hall of the Kloveniersdoelen, the musketeer branch of the civic militia. Rembrandt departed from convention, which ordered that such genre pieces should be stately and formal, rather a line-up than an action scene. Instead, he showed the militia readying themselves to embark on a mission, though the exact nature of the mission or event is a matter of ongoing debate.

Contrary to what is often said, the work was hailed as a success from the beginning. Parts of the canvas were cut off (approximately 20% from the left-hand side was removed) to make the painting fit its new position when it was moved to the town hall in 1715. In 1817 this large painting was moved to the Trippenhuis. Since 1885 the painting is on display at the Rijksmuseum.[m] In 1940 the painting was moved to Kasteel Radboud; in 1941 to a bunker near Heemskerk; in 1942 to St Pietersberg; in June 1945 it was shipped back to Amsterdam.

Expert assessments edit

 
The Polish Rider (c. 1655) is possibly a Lisowczyk on horseback.
 
The Man with the Golden Helmet, now housed in Gemäldegalerie in Berlin, was considered one of the most famous Rembrandt portraits but is no longer attributed to the master.[112]

In 1968, the Rembrandt Research Project began under the sponsorship of the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Scientific Research; it was initially expected to last a highly optimistic ten years. Art historians teamed up with experts from other fields to reassess the authenticity of works attributed to Rembrandt, using all methods available, including state-of-the-art technical diagnostics, and to compile a complete new catalogue raisonné of his paintings. As a result of their findings, many paintings that were previously attributed to Rembrandt have been removed from their list, although others have been added back.[113] Many of those removed are now thought to be the work of his students.

One example of activity is The Polish Rider, now housed in the Frick Collection in New York City. Rembrandt's authorship had been questioned by at least one scholar, Alfred von Wurzbach, at the beginning of the twentieth century but for many decades later most scholars, including the foremost authority writing in English, Julius S. Held, agreed that it was indeed by the master. In the 1980s, however, Dr. Josua Bruyn of the Foundation Rembrandt Research Project cautiously and tentatively attributed the painting to one of Rembrandt's closest and most talented pupils, Willem Drost, about whom little is known. But Bruyn's remained a minority opinion, the suggestion of Drost's authorship is now generally rejected, and the Frick itself never changed its own attribution, the label still reading "Rembrandt" and not "attributed to" or "school of". More recent opinion has shifted even more decisively in favor of the Frick; In his 1999 book Rembrandt's Eyes, Simon Schama and the Rembrandt Project scholar Ernst van de Wetering (Melbourne Symposium, 1997) both argued for attribution to the master. Those few scholars who still question Rembrandt's authorship feel that the execution is uneven and favour different attributions for different parts of the work.[114]

A similar issue was raised by Schama concerning the verification of titles associated with the subject matter depicted in Rembrandt's works. For example, the exact subject being portrayed in Aristotle with a Bust of Homer, recently retitled by curators at the Metropolitan Museum, has been directly challenged by Schama applying the scholarship of Paul Crenshaw.[115] Schama presents a substantial argument that it was the famous ancient Greek painter Apelles who is depicted in contemplation by Rembrandt and not Aristotle.[116]

Another painting, Pilate Washing His Hands, is also of questionable attribution. Critical opinion of this picture has varied since 1905, when Wilhelm von Bode described it as "a somewhat abnormal work" by Rembrandt. Scholars have since dated the painting to the 1660s and assigned it to an anonymous pupil, possibly Aert de Gelder. The composition bears superficial resemblance to mature works by Rembrandt but lacks the master's command of illumination and modeling.[117]

The attribution and re-attribution work is ongoing. In 2005 four oil paintings previously attributed to Rembrandt's students were reclassified as the work of Rembrandt himself: Study of an Old Man in Profile and Study of an Old Man with a Beard from a US private collection, Study of a Weeping Woman, owned by the Detroit Institute of Arts, and Portrait of an Elderly Woman in a White Bonnet, painted in 1640.[118] The Old Man Sitting in a Chair is a further example: in 2014, Professor Ernst van de Wetering offered his view to The Guardian that the demotion of the 1652 painting Old Man Sitting in a Chair "was a vast mistake...it is a most important painting. The painting needs to be seen in terms of Rembrandt's experimentation". This was highlighted much earlier by Nigel Konstam who studied Rembrandt throughout his career.[119]

Rembrandt's own studio practice is a major factor in the difficulty of attribution, since, like many masters before him, he encouraged his students to copy his paintings, sometimes finishing or retouching them to be sold as originals, and sometimes selling them as authorized copies. Additionally, his style proved easy enough for his most talented students to emulate. Further complicating matters is the uneven quality of some of Rembrandt's own work, and his frequent stylistic evolutions and experiments.[120] As well, there were later imitations of his work, and restorations which so seriously damaged the original works that they are no longer recognizable.[121]

Painting materials edit

 
Saskia as Flora (1635)

Technical investigation of Rembrandt's paintings in the possession of the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister[122] and in the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister (Kassel)[123] was conducted by Hermann Kühn in 1977. The pigment analyses of some thirty paintings have shown that Rembrandt's palette consisted of the following pigments: lead white, various ochres, Vandyke brown, bone black, charcoal black, lamp black, vermilion, madder lake, azurite, ultramarine, yellow lake and lead-tin-yellow. Synthetic orpiment was shown in the shadows of the sleeve of the jewish groom. This toxic arsenic yellow was rarely used in oil painting.[124] One painting (Saskia van Uylenburgh as Flora)[125] reportedly contains gamboge. Rembrandt very rarely used pure blue or green colors, the most pronounced exception being Belshazzar's Feast[126][127] in the National Gallery in London. The book by Bomford[126] describes more recent technical investigations and pigment analyses of Rembrandt's paintings predominantly in the National Gallery in London. The entire array of pigments employed by Rembrandt can be found at ColourLex.[128] The best source for technical information on Rembrandt's paintings on the web is the Rembrandt Database containing all works of Rembrandt with detailed investigative reports, infrared and radiography images and other scientific details.[129]

Name and signature edit

 
Slaughtered Ox (1655), now housed in Musée du Louvre in Paris

"Rembrandt" is a modification of the spelling of the artist's first name that he introduced in 1633. "Harmenszoon" indicates that his father's name is Harmen. "van Rijn" indicates that his family lived near the Rhine.[130]

Rembrandt's earliest signatures (c. 1625) consisted of an initial "R", or the monogram "RH" (for Rembrant Harmenszoon), and starting in 1629, "RHL" (the "L" stood, presumably, for Leiden). In 1632, he used this monogram early in the year, then added his family name to it, "RHL-van Rijn" but replaced this form in that same year and began using his first name alone with its original spelling, "Rembrant". In 1633 he added a "d", and maintained this form consistently from then on, proving that this minor change had a meaning for him (whatever it might have been). This change is purely visual; it does not change the way his name is pronounced. Curiously enough, despite the large number of paintings and etchings signed with this modified first name, most of the documents that mentioned him during his lifetime retained the original "Rembrant" spelling. (Note: the rough chronology of signature forms above applies to the paintings, and to a lesser degree to the etchings; from 1632, presumably, there is only one etching signed "RHL-v. Rijn," the large-format "Raising of Lazarus," B 73).[131] His practice of signing his work with his first name, later followed by Vincent van Gogh, was probably inspired by Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo who, then as now, were referred to by their first names alone.[132]

Workshop edit

 
One of van de Cappelle's 500 Rembrandt drawings

Rembrandt ran a large workshop and had many pupils. The list of Rembrandt pupils from his period in Leiden as well as his time in Amsterdam is quite long, mostly because his influence on painters around him was so great that it is difficult to tell whether someone worked for him in his studio or just copied his style for patrons eager to acquire a Rembrandt. A partial list should include[133] Ferdinand Bol, Adriaen Brouwer, Gerrit Dou, Willem Drost, Heiman Dullaart, Gerbrand van den Eeckhout, Carel Fabritius, Govert Flinck, Hendrick Fromantiou, Aert de Gelder, Samuel Dirksz van Hoogstraten, Abraham Janssens, Godfrey Kneller, Philip de Koninck, Jacob Levecq, Nicolaes Maes, Jürgen Ovens, Christopher Paudiß, Willem de Poorter, Jan Victors, and Willem van der Vliet.

Museum collections edit

 
The Rembrandt House Museum

The largest collections of Rembrandt's work are in the United States in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (mostly portraits) and the Frick Collection in New York City, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, in total 86 paintings.[134] Other large groups are in Germany, with 69 paintings, at the Gemäldegalerie in Berlin, Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister in Dresden, and Schloss Wilhelmshöhe in Kassel, and elsewhere. The UK has a total of 51, especially in the National Gallery and Royal Collection. There are 49 in the Netherlands, many in the Rijksmuseum, which has The Night Watch and The Jewish Bride, and the Mauritshuis in The Hague.[135] Others can be found in The Louvre, the Hermitage Museum, and Nationalmuseum, Stockholm. The Royal Castle in Warsaw displays two paintings by Rembrandt.[136]

The largest collections of drawings are in the older large museums such as the Rijksmuseum, Louvre and British Museum. All major print rooms have large collections of Rembrandt prints, although as some exist in only a single impression, no collection is complete. The degree to which these collections are displayed to the public or can easily be viewed by them in the print room, varies greatly.

The Rembrandt House Museum has fittings and furniture that are mostly not original but period pieces comparable to those Rembrandt might have had, and those in the many drawings and etchings set in the house, and contemporary paintings reflecting Rembrandt's use of the house for art dealing. His printmaking studio has been set up with a printing press, where replica prints are printed. The museum has a few early Rembrandt paintings, many loaned but an important collection of his prints, a good selection of which are on rotating display.

Influence and recognition edit

 
A Rembrandt statue and the sculptures of The Night Watch in 3D at the Rembrandtplein in Amsterdam
 
In 1775, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, then 25-years-old, wrote in a letter that "I live wholly with Rembrandt" ("...ich zeichne, künstle p. Und lebe ganz mit Rembrandt."). At the age of 81 (1831), Goethe wrote the essay "Rembrandt der Denker" ("Rembrandt the Thinker"), published in his posthumous collection.[137][138]

[...] I maintain that it did not occur to Protogenes, Apelles or Parrhasius, nor could it occur to them were they return to earth that (I am amazed simply to report this) a youth, a Dutchman, a beardless miller, could bring together so much in one human figure and express what is universal. All honor to thee, my Rembrandt! To have carried Illium, indeed all Asia, to Italy is a lesser achievement than to have brought the laurels of Greece and Italy to Holland, the achievement of a Dutchman who has seldom ventured outside the walls of his native city...

— Constantijn Huygens, Lord of Zuilichem, possibly the earliest known notable Rembrandt connoisseur and critic, 1629. Excerpt from the manuscript Autobiography of Constantijn Huygens (Koninklijke Bibliotheek, Den Haag), originally published in Oud Holland (1891), translated from the Dutch.[139]

Rembrandt is one of the most famous[140][141] and the best expertly researched visual artists in history.[142][143] His life and art have long attracted the attention of interdisciplinary scholarship such as art history, socio-political history,[144] cultural history,[145] education, humanities, philosophy and aesthetics,[146] psychology, sociology, literary studies,[147] anatomy,[148] medicine,[149] religious studies,[n][150] theology,[151] Jewish studies,[152] Oriental studies (Asian studies),[153] global studies,[154] and art market research.[155] He has been the subject of a vast amount of literature in genres of both fiction and nonfiction. Research and scholarship related to Rembrandt is an academic field in its own right with many notable connoisseurs and scholars[156] and has been very dynamic since the Dutch Golden Age.[142][157][143]

According to art historian and Rembrandt scholar Stephanie Dickey:

[Rembrandt] earned international renown as a painter, printmaker, teacher, and art collector while never leaving the Dutch Republic. In his home city of Leiden and in Amsterdam, where he worked for nearly forty years, he mentored generations of other painters and produced a body of work that has never ceased to attract admiration, critique, and interpretation. (...) Rembrandt's art is a key component in any study of the Dutch Golden Age, and his membership in the canon of artistic genius is well established but he is also a figure whose significance transcends specialist interest. Literary critics have pondered "Rembrandt" as a "cultural text"; novelists, playwrights, and filmmakers have romanticized his life, and in popular culture, his name has become synonymous with excellence for products and services, ranging from toothpaste to self-help advice.[143]

Francisco Goya, often considered to be among the last of the Old Masters, said, "I have had three masters: Nature, Velázquez, and Rembrandt." ("Yo no he tenido otros maestros que la Naturaleza, Velázquez y Rembrandt.")[158][159][160] In the history of the reception and interpretation of Rembrandt's art, it was the significant Rembrandt-inspired 'revivals' or 'rediscoveries' in 18th–19th century France,[161][162] Germany,[163][164][165] and Britain[166][167][168][169] that decisively helped in establishing his lasting fame in subsequent centuries.[170] When a critic referred to Auguste Rodin's busts in the same vein as Rembrandt's portraits, the French sculptor responded: "Compare me with Rembrandt? What sacrilege! With Rembrandt, the colossus of Art! What are you thinking of, my friend! We should prostrate ourselves before Rembrandt and never compare anyone with him!”[171] Vincent van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo (1885), "Rembrandt goes so deep into the mysterious that he says things for which there are no words in any language. It is with justice that they call Rembrandt—magician—that's no easy occupation."[172]

Rembrandt and the Jewish world edit

 
The Jewish Bride (c. 1665–1669), now housed at Rijksmuseum. Vincent van Gogh's wrote in 1885, "I should be happy to give 10 years of my life if I could go on sitting here in front of this picture (The Jewish Bride) for a fortnight, with only a crust of dry bread for food." In a letter to his brother Theo, Vincent wrote, "What an intimate, what an infinitely sympathetic picture it is."[173]

In his works, he exhibited knowledge of classical iconography. A depiction of a biblical scene was informed by Rembrandt's knowledge of the specific text, his assimilation of classical composition, and his observations of Amsterdam's Jewish population.[174] Because of his empathy for the human condition, he has been called "one of the great prophets of civilization".[175] Rembrandt had a considerable influence on many modern Jewish artists, writers and scholars (art critics and art historians in particular).[176][177] The German-Jewish painter Max Liebermann said, "Whenever I see a Frans Hals, I feel like painting; whenever I see a Rembrandt, I feel like giving up."[178] Marc Chagall wrote in 1922, "Neither Imperial Russia, nor the Russia of the Soviets needs me. They don't understand me. I am a stranger to them," and he added, "I'm certain Rembrandt loves me":[179]

Rembrandt regarded the Bible as the greatest Book in the world and held it in reverent affection all his life, in affluence and poverty, in success and failure. He never wearied in his devotion to biblical themes as subjects for his paintings and other graphic presentations, and in these portrayals he was the first to have the courage to use the Jews of his environment as models for the heroes of the sacred narratives.

— Franz Landsberger, a German Jewish émigré to America, the author of Rembrandt, the Jews, and the Bible (1946)[180][181]

Criticism of Rembrandt edit

 
Rembrandt Memorial Marker in the Westerkerk section of Amsterdam

Rembrandt has also been one of the most controversial (visual) artists in history.[142][182] Several of Rembrandt's notable critics include Constantijn Huygens, Joachim von Sandrart,[183] Andries Pels (who called Rembrandt "the first heretic in the art of painting"),[184] Samuel van Hoogstraten, Arnold Houbraken,[183] Filippo Baldinucci,[183] Gerard de Lairesse, Roger de Piles, John Ruskin,[185] and Eugène Fromentin:[182]

By 1875 Rembrandt was already a powerful figure, projecting from historical past into the present with such a strength that he could not be simply overlooked or passed by. The great shadow of the old master required a decided attitude. A late Romantic painter and critic, like Fromentin was, if he happened not to like some of Rembrandt's pictures, he felt obliged to justify his feeling. The greatness of the dramatic old master was for artists of about 1875 not a matter for doubt. 'Either I am wrong', Fromentin wrote from Holland 'or everybody else is wrong'. When Fromentin realized his inability to like some of the works by Rembrandt he formulated the following comments: 'I even do not dare to write down such a blasphemy; I would get ridiculed if this is disclosed'. Only about twenty-five years earlier another French Romantic master Eugène Delacroix, when expressing his admiration for Rembrandt, has written in his Journal a very different statement: '... perhaps one day we will discover that Rembrandt is a much greater painter than Raphael. It is a blasphemy which would make hair raise on the heads of all the academic painters'. In 1851 the blasphemy was to put Rembrandt above Raphael. In 1875 the blasphemy was not to admire everything Rembrandt had ever produced. Between these two dates, the appreciation of Rembrandt reached its turning point and since that time he was never deprived of the high rank in the art world.

— Rembrandt scholar Jan Białostocki (1972)[182]

In popular culture edit

 
The Rembrandt statue in Leiden

[...] One thing that really surprises me is the extent to which Rembrandt exists as a phenomenon in pop culture. You have this musical group call [sic] the Rembrandts, who wrote the theme song to Friends—"I'll Be There For You". There are Rembrandt restaurants, Rembrandt hotels, art supplies and other things that are more obvious. But then there's Rembrandt toothpaste. Why on Earth would somebody name a toothpaste after this artist who's known for his really dark tonalities? It doesn't make a lot of sense. But I think it's because his name has become synonymous with quality. It's even a verb—there's a term in underworld slang, 'to be Rembrandted,' which means to be framed for a crime. And people in the cinema world use it to mean pictorial effects that are overdone. He's just everywhere, and people who don't know anything, who wouldn't recognize a Rembrandt painting if they tripped over it, you say the name Rembrandt and they already know that this is a great artist. He's become a synonym for greatness.

— Rembrandt scholar, Stephanie Dickey, in an interview with Smithsonian Magazine, December 2006[141]

While shooting The Warrens of Virginia (1915), Cecil B. DeMille had experimented with lighting instruments borrowed from a Los Angeles opera house. When business partner Sam Goldwyn saw a scene in which only half an actor's face was illuminated, he feared the exhibitors would pay only half the price for the picture. DeMille remonstrated that it was Rembrandt lighting. "Sam's reply was jubilant with relief," recalled DeMille. "For Rembrandt lighting the exhibitors would pay double!"[186]

Works about Rembrandt edit

Literary works (e.g. poetry and fiction) edit

Music edit

Films edit

Selected works edit

 
Rembrandt Laughing (1628), now housed in J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles
 
The Girl in a Picture Frame (1641), now housed at Royal Castle in Warsaw
 
The evangelist Matthew and the Angel (1661)

Exhibitions edit

 
Moving Rembrandt's The Night Watch for the 1898 Rembrandt Exhibition
  • Sept–Oct 1898: Rembrandt Tentoonstelling (Rembrandt Exhibition), Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.[188]
  • Jan–Feb 1899: Rembrandt Tentoonstelling (Rembrandt Exhibition), Royal Academy, London.[188]
  • 21 April 2011 – 18 July 2011: Rembrandt and the Face of Jesus, Musée du Louvre.[189]
  • 16 September 2013 – 14 November 2013: Rembrandt: The Consummate Etcher, Syracuse University Art Galleries.[190]
  • 19 May 2014 – 27 June 2014: From Rembrandt to Rosenquist: Works on Paper from the NAC's Permanent Collection, National Arts Club.[191]
  • 19 October 2014 – 4 January 2015: Rembrandt, Rubens, Gainsborough and the Golden Age of Painting in Europe, Jule Collins Smith Museum of Art.[192]
  • 15 October 2014 – 18 January 2015: Rembrandt: The Late Works, The National Gallery, London.[193]
  • 12 February 2015 – 17 May 2015: Late Rembrandt, The Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.[194]
  • 16 September 2018 – 6 January 2019: Rembrandt – Painter as Printmaker, Denver Art Museum, Denver.[195]
  • 24 August 2019 – 1 December 2019: Leiden circa 1630: Rembrandt Emerges, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Kingston, Ontario.[196]
  • 4 October 2019 – 2 February 2020: Rembrandt's Light, Dulwich Picture Gallery, London.[197]
  • 18 February 2020 – 30 August 2020: Rembrandt and Amsterdam portraiture, 1590–1670 , Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid.[198]
  • 10 August 2020 – 1 November 2020: Young Rembrandt, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.[199]

Paintings edit

Self-portraits edit

Other major paintings edit

Drawings and etchings edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This version of his first name, "Rembrandt" with a "d," first appeared in his signatures in 1633. Until then, he had signed with a combination of initials or monograms. In late 1632, he began signing solely with his first name, "Rembrant". He added the "d" in the following year and stuck to this spelling for the rest of his life. Although scholars can only speculate, this change must have had a meaning for Rembrandt, which is generally interpreted as his wanting to be known by his first name like the great figures of the Italian Renaissance: Leonardo, Raphael etc., who did not sign with their last names, if at all.[9]
  2. ^ Rembrandt promised the owner—a woman with mental problems—to pay a quarter of the purchase price within a year;[21] the rest within five to six years. For some reason the purchase was not registered at the town hall and had to be renewed in 1653.[22]
  3. ^ Their son Rombartus died two months after his birth and their daughter Cornelia died at just three weeks of age. A second daughter, also named Cornelia, died after living barely over a month.
  4. ^ His children were christened in Dutch Reformed churches in Amsterdam: four in the Old Church and Titus, in the Southern Church.[26]
  5. ^ Five years later he didn't support her release without the presence of her brother, a sailor. In August 1656 Geertghe Dircx was listed as one of Rembrandt's seven major creditors.
  6. ^ Quite a few people were in debt after the First Anglo-Dutch War.[35] The Dutch were driven from Brazil too; the 'Brazilian Adventure' cost the Dutch merchant community dearly.[36]
  7. ^ Jan van de Capelle bought 500 of the drawings/prints by Lucas van Leyden, Hercules Seghers and Goltzius among others.
  8. ^ Useful totals of the figures from various different oeuvre catalogues, often divided into classes along the lines of: "very likely authentic", "possibly authentic" and "unlikely to be authentic" are given at the Online Rembrandt catalogue[69]
  9. ^ Two hundred years ago Bartsch listed 375. More recent catalogues have added three (two in unique impressions) and excluded enough to reach totals as follows: Schwartz, pp. 6, 289; Münz 1952, 279; Boon 1963, 287 – but Schwartz's total quoted does not tally with the book.
  10. ^ It is not possible to give a total, as a new wave of scholarship on Rembrandt drawings is still in progress – analysis of the Berlin collection for an exhibition in 2006/7 has produced a probable drop from 130 sheets there to about 60. Codart.nl[70] The British Museum is due to publish a new catalogue after a similar exercise.
  11. ^ While the popular interpretation is that these paintings represent a personal and introspective journey, it is possible that they were painted to satisfy a market for self-portraits by prominent artists. Van de Wetering, p. 290.
  12. ^ Such as Otto Benesch,[99][100][101] David Hockney,[102] Nigel Konstam, Jakob Rosenberg, Gary Schwartz, and Seymour Slive.[103][104]
  13. ^ The Rijksmuseum has a smaller copy of what is thought to be the full original composition.
  14. ^ It is important to note that Rembrandt's religious affiliation was uncertain. There is little evidence that Rembrandt formally belonged to any Christian denomination.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Or possibly 1607 as on 10 June 1634 he himself claimed to be 26 years old. See Is the Rembrandt Year being celebrated one year too soon? One year too late? 21 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine and (in Dutch) J. de Jong, Rembrandts geboortejaar een jaar te vroeg gevierd 18 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine for sources concerning Rembrandt's birth year, especially supporting 1607. However, most sources continue to use 1606.
  2. ^ "Rembrandt" 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  3. ^ See: list of drawings, prints (etchings), and paintings by Rembrandt.
  4. ^ a b Gombrich, p. 420.
  5. ^ Gombrich, p. 427.
  6. ^ Clark 1969, p. 203
  7. ^ Robert Fucci (2020) Rembrandt and the Business of Prints
  8. ^ "How Rembrandt van Rijn Changed the Art of Etching Forever". 28 December 2017.
  9. ^ . www.rembrandt-signature-file.com. Archived from the original on 9 April 2016.
  10. ^ Bull, et al., p. 28.
  11. ^ a b (in Dutch) Rembrandt biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (1718) by Arnold Houbraken, courtesy of the Digital library for Dutch literature
  12. ^ Joris van Schooten as teacher of Rembrandt and Lievens 26 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Simon van Leeuwen's Korte besgryving van het Lugdunum Batavorum nu Leyden, Leiden, 1672
  13. ^ Slive has a comprehensive biography, pp. 55ff.
  14. ^ Schwarz, G. (1987) Rembrandt, p. 134.
  15. ^ Slive, pp. 60, 65
  16. ^ Slive, pp. 60–61
  17. ^ "Netherlands, Noord-Holland Province, Church Records, 1553–1909 Image Netherlands, Noord-Holland Province, Church Records, 1553–1909; pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1971-31164-16374-68". Familysearch.org. from the original on 5 June 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  18. ^ Registration of the banns of Rembrandt and Saskia, kept at the Amsterdam City Archives
  19. ^ a b c Bull, et al., p. 28
  20. ^ a b "Rijksmuseum". Rijksmuseum.
  21. ^ Anrooij, Wim van; Hoftijzer, Paul (28 June 2017). Vijftien strekkende meter: Nieuwe onderzoeksmogelijkheden in het archief van de Bibliotheca Thysiana. Uitgeverij Verloren. ISBN 9789087046842 – via Google Books.
  22. ^ a b c "Rembrandt's boedelafstand door jhr. mr. J.F. Backer., Elseviers Geïllustreerd Maandschrift. Jaargang 29". DBNL.
  23. ^ Adams, p. 660
  24. ^ "Pieter C. Vis: Andries de Graeff (1611–1678) 't Gezagh is heerelyk: doch vol bekommeringen" (PDF).
  25. ^ "Portrait of Andries de Graeff (1611–1678), Burgomaster of Amsterdam". The Leiden Collection.
  26. ^ "Doopregisters, Zoek" (in Dutch). Amsterdam City Archive. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  27. ^ a b Slive, p. 71
  28. ^ "Indexen". archief.amsterdam.
  29. ^ Crenshaw, Paul (2006). Rembrandt's bankruptcy: the artist, his patrons, and the art market in seventeenth-century Nederlands. Cambridge: University Press. ISBN 978-0521858250. OCLC 902528433.
  30. ^ "Dircks, Geertje (ca. 1610-1656?)". Resources Huygens ING.
  31. ^ C. Driessen, pp. 151–157
  32. ^ G. Schwartz, pp. 292–293
  33. ^ Slive, p. 82
  34. ^ "Rembrandt". Voetnoot.org.
  35. ^ Dehing, P. (2012). Geld in Amsterdam. Wisselbank en wisselkoersen, 1650–1725. [Universiteit van Amsterdam], p. 142
  36. ^ Professor P. C. Emmer, review of The Rise of Commercial Empires England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650–1770, (review no. 345) https://reviews.history.ac.uk/review/345 Date accessed: 26 March 2023
  37. ^ Wexuan, Li. "Review of: 'Rembrandts plan: De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement", Oud Holland Reviews, April 2020.
  38. ^ Broos, B. (1999) Das Leben Rembrandts van Rijn (1606–1669). In: Rembrandt Selbstbildnisse, p. 79.
  39. ^ a b "Drie vragen aan Machiel Bosman | Rembrandts plan | Faillissement Rembrandt van Rijn".
  40. ^ C.M. in ’t Veld (2019) Rembrandts boedelafstand: een institutionele en politieke benadering
  41. ^ Wexuan, Li. "Review of: 'Rembrandts plan: De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement", Oud Holland Reviews, April 2020.
  42. ^ a b M. Bosman (2019) Rembrandts plan. De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement
  43. ^ Crenshaw, P. (2006) Rembrandt's Bankruptcy. The artist, his patrons and the art market in seventeenth-century Netherlands, pp. 61, 76.
  44. ^ Ruysscher, Dave De; Veld, Cornelis In ’T (26 April 2021). . Oud Holland – Journal for Art of the Low Countries. 134 (1): 9–24. doi:10.1163/18750176-13401002. S2CID 236619973. Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 – via brill.com.
  45. ^ Schwartz (1984), pp. 288–291
  46. ^ Slive, p. 84
  47. ^ "Inventarissen". archief.amsterdam.
  48. ^ Dudok van Heel, S.A.C. (1969) De Rembrandt's in de verzamelingen Hinlopen. In: Maandblad Amstelodamum, pp. 233-237. (In Dutch.)
  49. ^ "Inventarissen". archief.amsterdam.
  50. ^ Wexuan, Li. "Review of: 'Rembrandts plan: De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement", Oud Holland Reviews, April 2020.
  51. ^ Clark, 1974 p. 105
  52. ^ "De geldzaken van Rembrandt - Stadsarchief Amsterdam".
  53. ^ Clark 1974, pp. 60–61
  54. ^ Bull, et al., p. 29.
  55. ^ Jan Veth (1906) Rembrandt's verwarde zaken DBNL
  56. ^ Ruysscher, Dave De; Veld, Cornelis In ’T (26 April 2021). . Oud Holland – Journal for Art of the Low Countries. 134 (1): 9–24. doi:10.1163/18750176-13401002. S2CID 236619973. Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 – via brill.com.
  57. ^ Bailly, M.-Ch le; Bailly, Maria Charlotte Le (28 June 2008). Hof van Holland, Zeeland en West-Friesland: de hoofdlijnen van het procederen in civiele zaken voor het Hof van Holland, Zeeland en West-Friesland zowel in eerste instantie als in hoger beroep. Uitgeverij Verloren. ISBN 978-9087040567 – via Google Books.
  58. ^ Wexuan, Li. "Review of: 'Rembrandts plan: De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement", Oud Holland Reviews, April 2020.
  59. ^ "380 Whitewashing Rembrandt, part 2 – Gary Schwartz Art Historian". 1 March 2020.
  60. ^ Clark 1978, p. 34
  61. ^ Burial register of the Westerkerk with record of Rembrandt's burial, kept at the Amsterdam City Archives
  62. ^ "Cornelia van Rijn".
  63. ^ Dudok van Heel, S.A.C. (1987) Dossier Rembrandt, pp. 86–88
  64. ^ "Rembrandt made a mess of his legal and financial life". Leiden University. 16 November 2021.
  65. ^ Rembrandt’s insolvency: No preconceived plan, but smart entrepreneurship. VUB, 2021
  66. ^ Hughes, p. 6
  67. ^ . 28 July 2012. Archived from the original on 28 July 2012.
  68. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 September 2007.
  69. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 May 2012. Retrieved 10 July 2007.
  70. ^ "Rembrandt, der Zeichner". from the original on 27 May 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2007.
  71. ^ "Schwartzlist 301 – Blog entry by the Rembrandt scholar Gary Schwartz". Garyschwartzarthistorian.nl. 3 January 2010. from the original on 22 February 2012. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  72. ^ White and Buvelot 1999, p. 10.
  73. ^ Taylor, Michael (2007).Rembrandt's Nose: Of Flesh & Spirit in the Master's Portraits 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine p. 21, D.A.P./Distributed Art Publishers, Inc., New York ISBN 978-1933045443'
  74. ^ Durham, p. 60.
  75. ^ Bull, et al., pp. 11–13.
  76. ^ Clough, p. 23
  77. ^ Clark 1978, p. 28
  78. ^ van der Wetering, p. 268.
  79. ^ van de Wetering, pp. 160, 190.
  80. ^ Ackley, p. 14.
  81. ^ a b c van de Wetering, p. 284.
  82. ^ van de Wetering, p. 285.
  83. ^ van de Wetering, p. 287.
  84. ^ van de Wetering, p. 286.
  85. ^ van de Wetering, p. 288.
  86. ^ van de Wetering, pp. 163–165.
  87. ^ van de Wetering, p. 289.
  88. ^ van de Wetering, pp. 155–165.
  89. ^ van de Wetering, pp. 157–158, 190.
  90. ^ "In Rembrandt's (late) great portraits we feel face to face with real people, we sense their warmth, their need for sympathy and also their loneliness and suffering. Those keen and steady eyes that we know so well from Rembrandt's self-portraits must have been able to look straight into the human heart." Gombrich, p. 423.
  91. ^ "It (The Jewish Bride) is a picture of grown-up love, a marvelous amalgam of richness, tenderness, and trust... the heads which, in their truth, have a spiritual glow that painters influenced by the classical tradition could never achieve." Clark, p. 206.
  92. ^ Schwartz, 1994, pp. 8–12
  93. ^ White 1969, pp. 5–6
  94. ^ White 1969, p. 6
  95. ^ White 1969, pp. 6, 9–10
  96. ^ White, 1969 pp. 6–7
  97. ^ Christiaan Vogelaar & Gregor J.M. Weber (2006) Rembrandts Landschappen
  98. ^ See Schwartz, 1994, where the works are divided by subject, following Bartsch.
  99. ^ Benesch, Otto: The Drawings of Rembrandt: First Complete Edition in Six Volumes. (London: Phaidon, 1954–57)
  100. ^ Benesch, Otto: Rembrandt as a Draughtsman: An Essay with 115 Illustrations. (London: Phaidon Press, 1960)
  101. ^ Benesch, Otto: The Drawings of Rembrandt. A Critical and Chronological Catalogue [2nd ed., 6 vols.]. (London: Phaidon, 1973)
  102. ^ a b Lewis, Tim (16 November 2014). "David Hockney: 'When I'm working, I feel like Picasso, I feel I'm 30'". The Guardian. from the original on 16 May 2020. Retrieved 16 June 2020. David Hockney (2014): "There's a drawing by Rembrandt, I think it's the greatest drawing ever done. It's in the British Museum and it's of a family teaching a child to walk, so it's a universal thing, everybody has experienced this or seen it happen. Everybody. I used to print out Rembrandt drawings big and give them to people and say: 'If you find a better drawing send it to me. But if you find a better one it will be by Goya or Michelangelo perhaps.' But I don't think there is one actually. It's a magnificent drawing, magnificent."
  103. ^ Slive, Seymour: The Drawings of Rembrandt: A New Study. (London: Thames & Hudson, 2009)
  104. ^ Silve, Seymour: The Drawings of Rembrandt. (London: Thames & Hudson, 2019)
  105. ^ a b Mendelowitz, Daniel Marcus: Drawing. (New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, Inc., 1967), p. 305. As Mendelowitz (1967) noted: "Probably no one has combined to as great a degree as Rembrandt a disciplined exposition of what his eye saw and a love of line as a beautiful thing in itself. His "Winter Landscape" displays the virtuosity of performance of an Oriental master, yet unlike the Oriental calligraphy, it is not based on an established convention of brush performance. It is as personal as handwriting."
  106. ^ a b Sullivan, Michael: The Meeting of Eastern and Western Art. (Berkeley/Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1989), p. 91
  107. ^ Schrader, Stephanie; et al. (eds.): Rembrandt and the Inspiration of India 1 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine. (Los Angeles, CA: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2018) ISBN 978-1606065525
  108. ^ "Rembrandt and the Inspiration of India (catalogue)" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 18 October 2019. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  109. ^ "In Paintings: Rembrandt & his Mughal India Inspiration". 3 September 2017. from the original on 23 May 2018. Retrieved 12 May 2018.
  110. ^ Ganz, James (2013). Rembrandt's Century. San Francisco, CA: Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco. p. 45. ISBN 978-3791352244.
  111. ^ Beliën, H & P. Knevel (2006) Langs Rembrandts roem, pp. 92–121
  112. ^ John Russell (1 December 1985). "Art View; In Search of the Real Thing". The New York Times. from the original on 1 July 2017. Retrieved 12 February 2017.
  113. ^ "The Rembrandt Research Project: Past, Present, Future" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 22 August 2014. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  114. ^ See "Further Battles for the 'Lisowczyk' (Polish Rider) by Rembrandt" Zdzislaw Zygulski, Jr., Artibus et Historiae, Vol. 21, No. 41 (2000), pp. 197–205. Also New York Times story 8 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine. There is a book on the subject:Responses to Rembrandt; Who painted the Polish Rider? by Anthony Bailey (New York, 1993)
  115. ^ Schama, Simon (1999). Rembrandt's Eyes. Knopf, p. 720.
  116. ^ Schama, pp. 582–591.
  117. ^ "Rembrandt Pilate Washing His Hands Oil Painting Reproduction". Outpost Art. from the original on 12 January 2015. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  118. ^ "Entertainment | Lost Rembrandt works discovered". BBC News. 23 September 2005. from the original on 22 December 2006. Retrieved 7 October 2009.
  119. ^ Brown, Mark (23 May 2014), "Rembrandt expert urges National Gallery to rethink demoted painting", The Guardian, from the original on 21 September 2016, retrieved 21 December 2015
  120. ^ "...Rembrandt was not always the perfectly consistent, logical Dutchman he was originally anticipated to be." Ackley, p. 13.
  121. ^ van de Wetering, p. x.
  122. ^ Kühn, Hermann. 'Untersuchungen zu den Pigmenten und Malgründen Rembrandts, durchgeführt an den Gemälden der Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Dresden'(Examination of pigments and grounds used by Rembrandt, analysis carried out on paintings in the Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Dresden), Maltechnik/Restauro, issue 4 (1977): 223–233
  123. ^ Kühn, Hermann. 'Untersuchungen zu den Pigmenten und Malgründen Rembrandts, durchgeführt an den Gemälden der Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Kassel' (Examination of pigments and grounds used by Rembrandt, analysis carried out on paintings in the Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Kassel), Maltechnik/Restauro, volume 82 (1976): 25–33
  124. ^ Van Loon, A., Noble, P., Krekeler, A., van der Snickt, G., Janssens, K., Abe, Y., Nakai, I., & Dik, J. 2017. "Artificial orpiment, a new pigment in Rembrandt's palette". Heritage Science, 5 (26)
  125. ^ Rembrandt, Saskia as Flora 15 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, ColourLex
  126. ^ a b Bomford, D. et al., Art in the making: Rembrandt, New edition, Yale University Press, 2006
  127. ^ Rembrandt, Belshazzar's Feast, Pigment analysis 7 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine at ColourLex
  128. ^ "Resources Rembrandt". ColourLex. from the original on 24 February 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2021.
  129. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 August 2015. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  130. ^ Roberts, Russell. Rembrandt. Mitchell Lane Publishers, 2009. ISBN 978-1612287607. p. 13.
  131. ^ Chronology of his signatures (pdf) 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine with examples. Source: www.rembrandt-signature-file.com
  132. ^ Slive, p. 60
  133. ^ Rembrandt pupils (under Leraar van) in the RKD
  134. ^ Clark 1974, pp. 147–150. See the catalogue in Further reading for the location of all accepted Rembrandts
  135. ^ G. Schwartz (1987) Rembrandt, zijn leven, zijn schilderen.
  136. ^ . zamek-krolewski.pl. Archived from the original on 20 May 2014. Retrieved 20 May 2014. The works of art which Karolina Lanckorońska gave to the Royal Castle in 1994 was one of the most invaluable gift's made in the museum's history.
  137. ^ Münz, Ludwig: Die Kunst Rembrandts und Goethes Sehen. (Leipzig: Verlag Heinrich Keller, 1934)
  138. ^ Van den Boogert, B.; et al.: Goethe en Rembrandt. Tekeningen uit Weimar. Uit de grafische bestanden van de Kunstsammlungen zu Weimar, aangevuld met werken uit het Goethe-Nationalmuseum. (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 1999)
  139. ^ Binstock, Benjamin: Vermeer's Family Secrets: Genius, Discovery, and the Unknown Apprentice. (New York: Routledge, 2009), p. 330
  140. ^ *Golahny, Amy (2001), 'The Use and Misuse of Rembrandt: An Overview of Popular Reception 8 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine,'. Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 25(2): 305–322
    • Solman, Paul (21 June 2004). "Rembrandt's Journey". PBS.org. from the original on 7 November 2021. Retrieved 10 October 2018. Paul Solman (2004): "[Rembrandt] The most famous brand name in western art. In America alone it graces toothpaste, bracelet charms, restaurant and bars, counter-tops and of course the town of Rembrandt, Iowa just halfway around the world from the Rembrandt Hotel in Bangkok, Thailand."
    • Valiunas, Algis (25 December 2006). "Looking at Rembrandt". The Weekly Standard. from the original on 16 December 2018. Retrieved 25 April 2020. Algis Valiunas (2006): "Alongside Leonardo and Michelangelo, Rembrandt is one of the three most famous artists ever, with whom the public is on a first-name basis; and the name Rembrandt has lent the cachet of greatness and the grace of familiarity to sell everything from kitchen countertops to whitening toothpaste to fancy hotels in Bangkok and Knightsbridge."
  141. ^ a b Crawford, Amy (12 December 2006). "An Interview with Stephanie Dickey, author of "Rembrandt at 400"". Smithsonian Magazine. from the original on 21 September 2018. Retrieved 10 October 2018.
  142. ^ a b c Slive, Seymour: Rembrandt and his Critics, 1630–1730. (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1953)
  143. ^ a b c Franits, Wayne (ed.): The Ashgate Research Companion to Dutch Art of the Seventeenth Century. (Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2016)
  144. ^ *Negri, Antonio: The Savage Anomaly: The Power of Spinoza's Metaphysics and Politics. (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1991).
    • Ahmad, Iftikhar (2008), 'Art in Social Studies: Exploring the World and Ourselves with Rembrandt,'. The Journal of Aesthetic Education 42(2): 19–37
    • Molyneux, John (5 July 2019). . Rebelnews.ie (2019). Archived from the original on 30 June 2020. Retrieved 25 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

Works cited edit

  • Ackley, Clifford, et al., Rembrandt's Journey, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2004. ISBN 0-87846-677-0
  • Adams, Laurie Schneider (1999). Art Across Time. Volume II. New York: McGraw-Hill College.
  • Bomford, D. et al., Art in the making: Rembrandt, New edition, Yale University Press, 2006
  • Bull, Duncan, et al., Rembrandt-Caravaggio, Rijksmuseum, 2006.
  • Buvelot, Quentin, White, Christopher (eds), Rembrandt by himself, 1999, National Gallery
  • Clark, Kenneth (1969). Civilisation: a personal view. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-010801-4.
  • Clark, Kenneth, An Introduction to Rembrandt, 1978, London, John Murray/Readers Union, 1978
  • Clough, Shepard B. (1975). European History in a World Perspective. D.C. Heath and Company, Los Lexington, MA. ISBN 978-0-669-85555-5.
  • Driessen, Christoph, Rembrandts vrouwen, Bert Bakker, Amsterdam, 2012. ISBN 978-90-351-3690-8
  • Durham, John I. (2004). Biblical Rembrandt: Human Painter in a Landscape of Faith. Mercer University Press. ISBN 978-0-86554-886-2.
  • Gombrich, E.H., The Story of Art, Phaidon, 1995. ISBN 0-7148-3355-X
  • Hughes, Robert (2006), "The God of Realism", The New York Review of Books, vol. 53, no. 6
  • The Complete Etchings of Rembrandt Reproduced in Original Size, Gary Schwartz (editor). New York: Dover, 1988. ISBN 0-486-28181-7
  • Slive, Seymour, Dutch Painting, 1600–1800, Yale UP, 1995, ISBN 0-300-07451-4
  • van de Wetering, Ernst in Rembrandt by himself, 1999 National Gallery, London/Mauritshuis, The Hague, ISBN 1-85709-270-8
  • van de Wetering, Ernst, Rembrandt: The Painter at Work, Amsterdam University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-520-22668-2
  • White, Christopher, The Late Etchings of Rembrandt, 1999, British Museum/Lund Humphries, London ISBN 978-90-400-9315-9

Further reading edit

  • Catalogue raisonné: Stichting Foundation Rembrandt Research Project:
    • A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings – Volume I, which deals with works from Rembrandt's early years in Leiden (1629–1631), 1982
    • A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings – Volume II: 1631–1634. Bruyn, J., Haak, B. (et al.), Band 2, 1986, ISBN 978-90-247-3339-2
    • A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings – Volume III, 1635–1642. Bruyn, J., Haak, B., Levie, S.H., van Thiel, P.J.J., van de Wetering, E. (Ed. Hrsg.), Band 3, 1990, ISBN 978-90-247-3781-9
    • A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings – Volume IV. Ernst van de Wetering, Karin Groen et al. Springer, Dordrecht, the Netherlands. ISBN 1-4020-3280-3. p. 692. (Self-Portraits)
  • Rembrandt. Images and metaphors, Christian and Astrid Tümpel (editors), Haus Books London 2006 ISBN 978-1-904950-92-9
  • Anthony M. Amore; Tom Mashberg (2012). Stealing Rembrandts: The Untold Stories of Notorious Art Heists. St. Martin's Publishing. ISBN 978-0-230-33990-3.

External links edit

  • A biography of the artist Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn from the National Gallery, London
  • Works and literature on Rembrandt from Pubhist.com
  • The Drawings of Rembrandt: a revision of Otto Benesch's catalogue raisonné by Martin Royalton-Kisch (in progress)
  • Rembrandt's house in Amsterdam Site of the Rembrandt House Museum in Amsterdam, with images of many of his etchings
  • 114 artworks by or after Rembrandt at the Art UK site
  • Works by or about Rembrandt at Internet Archive
  • Rembrandt van Rijn, General Resources
  • The transparent connoisseur 3: the 30 million pound question by Gary Schwartz
  • Rembrandt
  • The Rembrandt Database research data on the paintings, including the full contents of the first volumes of A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings by the Rembrandt Research Project
  • Die Urkunden über Rembrandt by C. Hofstede de Groot (1906).

rembrandt, this, article, about, dutch, artist, other, uses, disambiguation, this, dutch, name, surname, rijn, rijn, harmenszoon, rijn, ɑː, dutch, ˈrɛmbrɑnt, ˈɦɑrmə, ˌsoːɱ, vɑn, ˈrɛin, july, 1606, october, 1669, usually, simply, known, dutch, golden, painter, . This article is about the Dutch artist For other uses see Rembrandt disambiguation In this Dutch name the surname is Van Rijn not Rijn Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn ˈ r ɛ m b r ae n t ˈ r ɛ m b r ɑː n t 2 Dutch ˈrɛmbrɑnt ˈɦɑrme n ˌsoːɱ vɑn ˈrɛin 15 July 1606 1 4 October 1669 usually simply known as Rembrandt was a Dutch Golden Age painter printmaker and draughtsman An innovative and prolific master in three media 3 he is generally considered one of the greatest visual artists in the history of art 4 It is estimated Rembrandt produced a total of about three hundred paintings three hundred etchings and two thousand drawings RembrandtSelf Portrait with Beret and Turned Up Collar 1659 BornRembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn 1606 07 15 15 July 1606 1 Leiden Dutch RepublicDied4 October 1669 1669 10 04 aged 63 Amsterdam Dutch RepublicEducationJacob van Swanenburg Pieter LastmanKnown forPainting printmaking drawingNotable workSelf portraitsThe Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp 1632 Belshazzar s Feast The Night Watch 1642 The Hundred Guilder Print etching c 1647 1649 Bathsheba at Her Bath 1654 Syndics of the Drapers Guild 1662 MovementDutch Golden AgeBaroqueSpouseSaskia van Uylenburgh m 1634 died 1642 wbr ChildrenTitus and CorneliaSignatureUnlike most Dutch masters of the 17th century Rembrandt s works depict a wide range of styles and subject matter from portraits and self portraits to landscapes genre scenes allegorical and historical scenes biblical and mythological themes and animal studies His contributions to art came in a period of great wealth and cultural and scientific achievement that historians call the Dutch Golden Age when Dutch art especially Dutch painting was prolific and innovative Rembrandt never went abroad but was considerably influenced by the work of the Italian Old Masters and Dutch and Flemish artists who had studied in Italy After he achieved youthful success as a portrait painter Rembrandt s later years were marked by personal tragedy and financial hardships Yet his etchings and paintings were popular throughout his lifetime his reputation as an artist remained high 5 and for twenty years he taught many important Dutch painters 6 Rembrandt s portraits of his contemporaries self portraits and illustrations of scenes from the Bible are regarded as his greatest creative triumphs His 40 self portraits form an intimate autobiography 4 Rembrandt s foremost contribution in the history of printmaking was his transformation of the etching process from a relatively new reproductive technique into an art form 7 8 His reputation as the greatest etcher in the history of the medium was established in his lifetime Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Insolvency 3 Works 3 1 Periods themes and styles 3 2 Graphic works 3 3 Asian inspiration 3 4 The Night Watch 4 Expert assessments 5 Painting materials 6 Name and signature 7 Workshop 8 Museum collections 9 Influence and recognition 9 1 Rembrandt and the Jewish world 9 2 Criticism of Rembrandt 9 3 In popular culture 9 4 Works about Rembrandt 9 4 1 Literary works e g poetry and fiction 9 4 2 Music 9 4 3 Films 10 Selected works 11 Exhibitions 12 Paintings 12 1 Self portraits 12 2 Other major paintings 13 Drawings and etchings 14 Notes 15 References 15 1 Works cited 16 Further reading 17 External linksEarly life and education edit nbsp The Prodigal Son in the Brothel a self portrait with Saskia van Uylenburgh c 1635 nbsp Rembrandt s portrait of Saskia van Uylenburgh c 1635 Rembrandt a Harmenszoon van Rijn was born on 15 July 1606 in Leiden 1 in the Dutch Republic now the Netherlands He was the ninth child born to Harmen Gerritszoon van Rijn and Neeltgen Willemsdochter van Zuijtbrouck 10 His family was quite well to do his father was a miller and his mother was a baker s daughter His mother was Catholic and his father belonged to the Dutch Reformed Church Religion is a central theme in Rembrandt s works and the religiously fraught period in which he lived makes his faith a matter of interest As a boy he attended a Latin school At the age of 13 he was enrolled at the University of Leiden although according to a contemporary he had a greater inclination towards painting he was soon apprenticed to Jacob van Swanenburg with whom he spent three years 11 After a brief but important apprenticeship of six months with the history painter Pieter Lastman in Amsterdam Rembrandt stayed a few months with Jacob Pynas and then started his own workshop though Simon van Leeuwen claimed that Joris van Schooten taught Rembrandt in Leiden 11 12 Career edit nbsp Rembrandt lived at Amstel river almost next to Kloveniersdoelen where the Night Watch was exhibited for years painting by Jan Ekels the Elder 1775 nbsp Rembrandt s house at Jodenbreestraat by Cornelis Springer 1853 in the back the Zuiderkerk where his children were buriedIn 1624 or 1625 Rembrandt opened a studio in Leiden which he shared with friend and colleague Jan Lievens In 1627 Rembrandt began to accept students among them Gerrit Dou and Isaac de Jouderville 13 Joan Huydecoper is mentioned as the first buyer of a Rembrandt painting in 1628 14 In 1629 Rembrandt was discovered by the statesman Constantijn Huygens who procured for Rembrandt important commissions from the court of The Hague As a result of this connection Prince Frederik Hendrik continued to purchase paintings from Rembrandt 15 At the end of 1631 Rembrandt moved to Amsterdam a city rapidly expanding as the business and trade capital He began to practice as a professional portraitist for the first time with great success He initially stayed with an art dealer Hendrick van Uylenburgh and in 1634 married Hendrick s cousin Saskia van Uylenburgh 16 17 Saskia came from a respected family her father Rombertus was a lawyer and had been burgomaster mayor of Leeuwarden The couple married in the local church of St Annaparochie without the presence of Rembrandt s relatives 18 In the same year Rembrandt became a citizen of Amsterdam and a member of the local guild of painters He also acquired a number of students among them Ferdinand Bol and Govert Flinck 19 In 1635 Rembrandt and Saskia rented a fashionable lodging with a view of the river Amstel 20 In 1639 they moved to a large and recently modernized house in the upscale Breestraat with artists and art dealers Nicolaes Pickenoy a portrait painter was his neighbor The mortgage to finance the 13 000 guilder purchase would be a cause for later financial difficulties b 19 The neighborhood sheltered many immigrants and was becoming the Jewish quarter It was there that Rembrandt frequently sought his Jewish neighbors to model for his Old Testament scenes 23 One of his great patrons at early age was Amsterdam statesman Andries de Graeff 24 25 Although they were by now affluent the couple suffered several personal setbacks three children died within weeks of their births c d Only their fourth child Titus who was born in 1641 survived into adulthood Saskia died in 1642 probably from tuberculosis Rembrandt s drawings of her on her sick and death bed are among his most moving works 27 20 After Saskia s illness the widow Geertje Dircx was hired as Titus caretaker and dry nurse at some time she also became Rembrandt s lover In May 1649 she left and charged Rembrandt with breach of promise and asked to be awarded alimony 19 Rembrandt tried to settle the matter amicably but to pay her lawyer she pawned the diamond ring he had given her that once belonged to Saskia On 14 October they came to an agreement the court particularly stated that Rembrandt had to pay a yearly maintenance allowance provided that Titus remained her only heir and she sold none of Rembrandt s possessions 28 29 As Dircx broke her promise she was committed to a women s house of correction at Gouda in August 1650 30 Rembrandt paid for the costs 31 e In early 1649 Rembrandt began a relationship with the 23 year old Hendrickje Stoffels who had initially been his maid She may have been the cause of Geertje s leaving In 1654 Rembrandt produced a controversial nude Bathsheba at Her Bath In June Hendrickje received three summonses from the Reformed Church to answer the charge that she had committed the acts of a whore with Rembrandt the painter In July she admitted her guilt and was banned from receiving communion 32 Rembrandt was not summoned to appear for the Church council 33 In October they had a daughter Cornelia Had he remarried he would have lost access to a trust set up for Titus in Saskia s will 27 Insolvency edit nbsp Rembrandt s son Titus painted as a Franciscan monk 1660 nbsp Rembrandt moved to Rozengracht 184 Stadsarchief Amsterdam nbsp Sketch The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis October 1661 or laterRembrandt despite his artistic success found himself in financial turmoil His penchant for acquiring art prints and rare items led him to live beyond his means In January 1653 the sale of the property formally was finalized but Rembrandt still had to cover half of the remaining mortgage Creditors began pressing for installments but Rembrandt facing financial strain sought a postponement The house required repairs prompting Rembrandt to borrow money from friends including Jan Six 34 f In November 1655 Rembrandt s son Titus then just 14 years old made a will that named his father as the sole heir effectively excluding his mother s family 37 38 In December of that year Rembrandt organized a sale of his paintings but the proceeds fell short of expectations 39 This was a challenging period marked by a plague outbreak that also affected the art business As a result Rembrandt applied for a high court arrangement known as cessio bonorum 40 Despite the financial difficulties Rembrandt s bankruptcy wasn t forced rather he seemed to have orchestrated it possibly to create room for marriage to his beloved Hendrickje 39 41 In July 1656 he declared his insolvency taking stock and willingly surrendered his assets 42 Notably he had already transferred the house to his son 22 Both the authorities and his creditors showed leniency granting him ample time to settle his debts Jacob J Hinlopen obviously played a role 43 In November 1657 another auction was held to sell his paintings as well as a substantial number of etching plates and drawings some by renowned artists such as Raphael Mantegna and Giorgione g Remarkably Rembrandt was permitted to retain his tools as a means of generating income 22 Rembrandt lost the guardianship of his son and thus control over his actions A new guardian Louis Crayers claimed the house in settlement of Titus s debt 44 The sale list comprising 363 items offers insight into Rembrandt s diverse collections which encompassed Old Master paintings drawings Roman emperors busts Greek philosophers statues books a bible two globes bonnets armor and various objects from Asia chinaware as well as a collections of natural history specimens two lion skins a bird of paradise corals and minerals 45 Unfortunately the prices realized in the sale were disappointing 46 By February 1658 Rembrandt house was sold at a foreclosure auction and the family moved to more modest lodgings at Rozengracht 47 In 1660 he finished Ahasuerus and Haman at the feast of Esther which he sold to Jan J Hinlopen 48 Early December 1660 the sale of the house was finalized but the proceeds went directly to Titus guardian 49 50 Two weeks later Hendrickje and Titus established a dummy corporation as art dealers allowing Rembrandt who had board and lodging to continue his artistic pursuits 51 52 In 1661 they secured a contract for a major project at the newly completed town hall The resulting work The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis was rejected by the mayors and returned to the painter within a few weeks the surviving fragment in Stockholm is only a quarter of the original 53 Despite these setbacks Rembrandt continued to receive significant portrait commissions and completed notable works such as the Sampling Officials in 1662 54 It remains a challenge to gauge Rembrandt s wealth accurately as he may may overestimated the value of his art collection 42 Nonetheless half of his assets were earmarked for Titus inheritance 55 In March 1663 with Hendrickje s illness Titus assumed a more prominent role Isaac van Hertsbeeck Rembrandt s primary creditor went to the High Court and contestested Titus priority for payment leading to legal battles that Titus ultimately won in 1665 when he came of age 56 57 58 During this time Rembrandt worked on notable pieces like the Jewish Bride and his final self portraits but struggled with rent arrears 59 Notably Cosimo III de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany visited Rembrandt twice and returned to Florence with one of the self portraits 60 Rembrandt outlived both Hendrickje and Titus he passed away on Friday 4 October 1669 he was buried four days later in a rented grave in the Westerkerk His heirs paid a substantial amount of money suggesting his relative wealth at the time 61 His illegitimate child Cornelia 1654 1684 eventually moved to Batavia in 1670 accompanied by an obscure painter and her mother s inheritance 62 Titus considerable inheritance passed to his only grandchild Titia 1669 1715 who never married and lived at Blauwburgwal 63 In summary Rembrandt s life was marked by more than just artistic achievements he navigated numerous legal and financial challenges leaving a complex legacy 64 Rembrandt did have a tendency to push the legal limits 65 Works editSee also List of paintings by Rembrandt List of etchings by Rembrandt and List of drawings by Rembrandt nbsp Rembrandt s only known seascape The Storm on the Sea of Galilee 1633 is still missing after the robbery from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990 nbsp A Polish Nobleman 1637 nbsp Rembrandt only Winterlandscape 1646In a letter to Huygens Rembrandt offered the only surviving explanation of what he sought to achieve through his art writing that the greatest and most natural movement translated from de meeste en de natuurlijkste beweegelijkheid The word beweegelijkheid translates to emotion or motive Whether this refers to objectives material or something else is not known but critics have drawn particular attention to the way Rembrandt seamlessly melded the earthly and spiritual 66 Earlier 20th century connoisseurs claimed Rembrandt had produced well over 600 paintings 67 nearly 400 etchings and 2 000 drawings 68 More recent scholarship from the 1960s to the present day led by the Rembrandt Research Project often controversially has winnowed his oeuvre to nearer 300 paintings h His prints traditionally all called etchings although many are produced in whole or part by engraving and sometimes drypoint have a much more stable total of slightly under 300 i It is likely Rembrandt made many more drawings in his lifetime than 2 000 but those extant are more rare than presumed j Two experts claim that the number of drawings whose autograph status can be regarded as effectively certain is no higher than about 75 although this is disputed The list was to be unveiled at a scholarly meeting in February 2010 71 At one time approximately 90 paintings were counted as Rembrandt self portraits but it is now known that he had his students copy his own self portraits as part of their training Modern scholarship has reduced the autograph count to over forty paintings as well as a few drawings and thirty one etchings which include many of the most remarkable images of the group 72 Some show him posing in quasi historical fancy dress or pulling faces at himself His oil paintings trace the progress from an uncertain young man through the dapper and very successful portrait painter of the 1630s to the troubled but massively powerful portraits of his old age Together they give a remarkably clear picture of the man his appearance and his psychological make up as revealed by his richly weathered face k In his portraits and self portraits he angles the sitter s face in such a way that the ridge of the nose nearly always forms the line of demarcation between brightly illuminated and shadowy areas A Rembrandt face is a face partially eclipsed and the nose bright and obvious thrusting into the riddle of halftones serves to focus the viewer s attention upon and to dramatize the division between a flood of light an overwhelming clarity and a brooding duskiness 73 In a number of biblical works including The Raising of the Cross Joseph Telling His Dreams and The Stoning of Saint Stephen Rembrandt painted himself as a character in the crowd Durham suggests that this was because the Bible was for Rembrandt a kind of diary an account of moments in his own life 74 Among the more prominent characteristics of Rembrandt s work are his use of chiaroscuro the theatrical employment of light and shadow derived from Caravaggio or more likely from the Dutch Caravaggisti but adapted for very personal means 75 Also notable are his dramatic and lively presentation of subjects devoid of the rigid formality that his contemporaries often displayed and a deeply felt compassion for mankind irrespective of wealth and age His immediate family his wife Saskia his son Titus and his common law wife Hendrickje often figured prominently in his paintings many of which had mythical biblical or historical themes Periods themes and styles edit nbsp The Abduction of Europa 1632 has been described as a shining example of the golden age of Baroque painting 76 nbsp Portrait of Haesje Jacobsdr van Cleyburg from Rotterdam 1634 completed during the height of his commercial success nbsp Rembrandt van Rijn Self Portrait with a flat cap 1642 Royal Collection nbsp Self Portrait 1658 now housed in the Frick Collection in New York City has been described as the calmest and grandest of all his portraits 77 Throughout his career Rembrandt took as his primary subjects the themes of portraiture landscape and narrative painting For the last he was especially praised by his contemporaries who extolled him as a masterly interpreter of biblical stories for his skill in representing emotions and attention to detail 78 Stylistically his paintings progressed from the early smooth manner characterized by fine technique in the portrayal of illusionistic form to the late rough treatment of richly variegated paint surfaces which allowed for an illusionism of form suggested by the tactile quality of the paint itself Rembrandt must have realized that if he kept the paint deliberately loose and paint like on some parts of the canvas the perception of space became much greater 79 A parallel development may be seen in Rembrandt s skill as a printmaker In the etchings of his maturity particularly from the late 1640s onward the freedom and breadth of his drawings and paintings found expression in the print medium as well The works encompass a wide range of subject matter and technique sometimes leaving large areas of white paper to suggest space at other times employing complex webs of line to produce rich dark tones 80 Lastman s influence on Rembrandt was most prominent during his period in Leiden from 1625 to 1631 81 Paintings were rather small but rich in details for example in costumes and jewelry Religious and allegorical themes were favored as were tronies 81 In 1626 Rembrandt produced his first etchings the wide dissemination of which would largely account for his international fame 81 In 1629 he completed Judas Repentant Returning the Pieces of Silver and The Artist in His Studio works that evidence his interest in the handling of light and variety of paint application and constitute the first major progress in his development as a painter 82 During his early years in Amsterdam 1632 1636 Rembrandt began to paint dramatic biblical and mythological scenes in high contrast and of large format The Blinding of Samson 1636 Belshazzar s Feast c 1635 Danae 1636 but reworked later seeking to emulate the baroque style of Rubens 83 With the occasional help of assistants in Uylenburgh s workshop he painted numerous portrait commissions both small Jacob de Gheyn III and large Portrait of the Shipbuilder Jan Rijcksen and his Wife 1633 Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp 1632 84 By the late 1630s Rembrandt had produced a few paintings and many etchings of landscapes Often these landscapes highlighted natural drama featuring uprooted trees and ominous skies Cottages before a Stormy Sky c 1641 The Three Trees 1643 From 1640 his work became less exuberant and more sober in tone possibly reflecting personal tragedy Biblical scenes were now derived more often from the New Testament than the Old Testament as had been the case before In 1642 he painted The Night Watch the most substantial of the important group portrait commissions which he received in this period and through which he sought to find solutions to compositional and narrative problems that had been attempted in previous works 85 In the decade following the Night Watch Rembrandt s paintings varied greatly in size subject and style The previous tendency to create dramatic effects primarily by strong contrasts of light and shadow gave way to the use of frontal lighting and larger and more saturated areas of color Simultaneously figures came to be placed parallel to the picture plane These changes can be seen as a move toward a classical mode of composition and considering the more expressive use of brushwork as well may indicate a familiarity with Venetian art Susanna and the Elders 1637 47 86 At the same time there was a marked decrease in painted works in favor of etchings and drawings of landscapes 87 In these graphic works natural drama eventually made way for quiet Dutch rural scenes In the 1650s Rembrandt s style changed again Colors became richer and brush strokes more pronounced With these changes Rembrandt distanced himself from earlier work and current fashion which increasingly inclined toward fine detailed works His use of light becomes more jagged and harsh and shine becomes almost nonexistent His singular approach to paint application may have been suggested in part by familiarity with the work of Titian and could be seen in the context of the then current discussion of finish and surface quality of paintings Contemporary accounts sometimes remark disapprovingly of the coarseness of Rembrandt s brushwork and the artist himself was said to have dissuaded visitors from looking too closely at his paintings 88 The tactile manipulation of paint may hearken to medieval procedures when mimetic effects of rendering informed a painting s surface The result is a richly varied handling of paint deeply layered and often apparently haphazard which suggests form and space in both an illusory and highly individual manner 89 In later years biblical themes were often depicted but emphasis shifted from dramatic group scenes to intimate portrait like figures James the Apostle 1661 In his last years Rembrandt painted his most deeply reflective self portraits from 1652 to 1669 he painted fifteen and several moving images of both men and women The Jewish Bride c 1666 in love in life and before God 90 91 Graphic works edit nbsp The Hundred Guilder Print c 1647 49 an etching now housed in the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo nbsp The Three Trees 1643 nbsp The Shell a cone snail is the only known still life Rembrandt ever etched Rembrandt produced etchings for most of his career from 1626 to 1660 when he was forced to sell his printing press and practically abandoned etching Only the troubled year of 1649 produced no dated work 92 He took easily to etching and though he learned to use a burin and partly engraved many plates the freedom of etching technique was fundamental to his work He was very closely involved in the whole process of printmaking and must have printed at least early examples of his etchings himself At first he used a style based on drawing but soon moved to one based on painting using a mass of lines and numerous bitings with the acid to achieve different strengths of line Towards the end of the 1630s he reacted against this manner and moved to a simpler style with fewer bitings 93 He worked on the so called Hundred Guilder Print in stages throughout the 1640s and it was the critical work in the middle of his career from which his final etching style began to emerge 94 Although the print only survives in two states the first very rare evidence of much reworking can be seen underneath the final print and many drawings survive for elements of it 95 In the mature works of the 1650s Rembrandt was more ready to improvise on the plate and large prints typically survive in several states up to eleven often radically changed He now used hatching to create his dark areas which often take up much of the plate He also experimented with the effects of printing on different kinds of paper including Japanese paper which he used frequently and on vellum He began to use surface tone leaving a thin film of ink on parts of the plate instead of wiping it completely clean to print each impression He made more use of drypoint exploiting especially in landscapes the rich fuzzy burr that this technique gives to the first few impressions 96 His prints have similar subjects to his paintings although the 27 self portraits are relatively more common and portraits of other people less so The landscapes mostly small largely set the course for the graphic treatment of landscape until the end of the 19th century Of the many hundreds of drawings Rembrandt made only about two hundred have a landscape motif as their subject and of the approximately three hundred etchings about thirty show a landscape As for his painted landscapes one does not even get beyond eight works 97 One third of his etchings are of religious subjects many treated with a homely simplicity whilst others are his most monumental prints A few erotic or just obscene compositions have no equivalent in his paintings 98 He owned until forced to sell it a magnificent collection of prints by other artists and many borrowings and influences in his work can be traced to artists as diverse as Mantegna Raphael Hercules Seghers and Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione Drawings by Rembrandt and his pupils followers have been extensively studied by many artists and scholars l through the centuries His original draughtsmanship has been described as an individualistic art style that was very similar to East Asian old masters most notably Chinese masters 105 a combination of formal clarity and calligraphic vitality in the movement of pen or brush that is closer to Chinese painting in technique and feeling than to anything in European art before the twentieth century 106 Asian inspiration edit Main article Rembrandt s Mughal drawings nbsp Rembrandt s drawing of an Indian Mughal painting nbsp Self Portrait with Raised Sabre c 1634 Rembrandt was interested in Mughal miniatures especially around the 1650s He drew versions of some 23 Mughal paintings and may have owned an album of them These miniatures include paintings of Shah Jahan Akbar Jahangir and Dara Shikoh and may have influenced the costumes and other aspects of his works 107 108 109 110 The Night Watch edit nbsp The Night Watch or The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq 1642 an oil on canvas portrait now housed in RijksmuseumRembrandt painted The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq between 1640 and 1642 which became his most famous work 111 This picture was called De Nachtwacht by the Dutch and The Night Watch by Sir Joshua Reynolds because by 1781 the picture was so dimmed and defaced that it was almost indistinguishable and it looked quite like a night scene After it was cleaned it was discovered to represent broad day a party of 18 musketeers stepping from a gloomy courtyard into the blinding sunlight For Theophile Thore it was the prettiest painting in the world The piece was commissioned for the new hall of the Kloveniersdoelen the musketeer branch of the civic militia Rembrandt departed from convention which ordered that such genre pieces should be stately and formal rather a line up than an action scene Instead he showed the militia readying themselves to embark on a mission though the exact nature of the mission or event is a matter of ongoing debate Contrary to what is often said the work was hailed as a success from the beginning Parts of the canvas were cut off approximately 20 from the left hand side was removed to make the painting fit its new position when it was moved to the town hall in 1715 In 1817 this large painting was moved to the Trippenhuis Since 1885 the painting is on display at the Rijksmuseum m In 1940 the painting was moved to Kasteel Radboud in 1941 to a bunker near Heemskerk in 1942 to St Pietersberg in June 1945 it was shipped back to Amsterdam Expert assessments editSee also Rembrandt catalog raisonne 1968 Further information Man in a Plumed Beret nbsp The Polish Rider c 1655 is possibly a Lisowczyk on horseback nbsp The Man with the Golden Helmet now housed in Gemaldegalerie in Berlin was considered one of the most famous Rembrandt portraits but is no longer attributed to the master 112 In 1968 the Rembrandt Research Project began under the sponsorship of the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Scientific Research it was initially expected to last a highly optimistic ten years Art historians teamed up with experts from other fields to reassess the authenticity of works attributed to Rembrandt using all methods available including state of the art technical diagnostics and to compile a complete new catalogue raisonne of his paintings As a result of their findings many paintings that were previously attributed to Rembrandt have been removed from their list although others have been added back 113 Many of those removed are now thought to be the work of his students One example of activity is The Polish Rider now housed in the Frick Collection in New York City Rembrandt s authorship had been questioned by at least one scholar Alfred von Wurzbach at the beginning of the twentieth century but for many decades later most scholars including the foremost authority writing in English Julius S Held agreed that it was indeed by the master In the 1980s however Dr Josua Bruyn of the Foundation Rembrandt Research Project cautiously and tentatively attributed the painting to one of Rembrandt s closest and most talented pupils Willem Drost about whom little is known But Bruyn s remained a minority opinion the suggestion of Drost s authorship is now generally rejected and the Frick itself never changed its own attribution the label still reading Rembrandt and not attributed to or school of More recent opinion has shifted even more decisively in favor of the Frick In his 1999 book Rembrandt s Eyes Simon Schama and the Rembrandt Project scholar Ernst van de Wetering Melbourne Symposium 1997 both argued for attribution to the master Those few scholars who still question Rembrandt s authorship feel that the execution is uneven and favour different attributions for different parts of the work 114 A similar issue was raised by Schama concerning the verification of titles associated with the subject matter depicted in Rembrandt s works For example the exact subject being portrayed in Aristotle with a Bust of Homer recently retitled by curators at the Metropolitan Museum has been directly challenged by Schama applying the scholarship of Paul Crenshaw 115 Schama presents a substantial argument that it was the famous ancient Greek painter Apelles who is depicted in contemplation by Rembrandt and not Aristotle 116 Another painting Pilate Washing His Hands is also of questionable attribution Critical opinion of this picture has varied since 1905 when Wilhelm von Bode described it as a somewhat abnormal work by Rembrandt Scholars have since dated the painting to the 1660s and assigned it to an anonymous pupil possibly Aert de Gelder The composition bears superficial resemblance to mature works by Rembrandt but lacks the master s command of illumination and modeling 117 The attribution and re attribution work is ongoing In 2005 four oil paintings previously attributed to Rembrandt s students were reclassified as the work of Rembrandt himself Study of an Old Man in Profile and Study of an Old Man with a Beard from a US private collection Study of a Weeping Woman owned by the Detroit Institute of Arts and Portrait of an Elderly Woman in a White Bonnet painted in 1640 118 The Old Man Sitting in a Chair is a further example in 2014 Professor Ernst van de Wetering offered his view to The Guardian that the demotion of the 1652 painting Old Man Sitting in a Chair was a vast mistake it is a most important painting The painting needs to be seen in terms of Rembrandt s experimentation This was highlighted much earlier by Nigel Konstam who studied Rembrandt throughout his career 119 Rembrandt s own studio practice is a major factor in the difficulty of attribution since like many masters before him he encouraged his students to copy his paintings sometimes finishing or retouching them to be sold as originals and sometimes selling them as authorized copies Additionally his style proved easy enough for his most talented students to emulate Further complicating matters is the uneven quality of some of Rembrandt s own work and his frequent stylistic evolutions and experiments 120 As well there were later imitations of his work and restorations which so seriously damaged the original works that they are no longer recognizable 121 Painting materials edit nbsp Saskia as Flora 1635 Technical investigation of Rembrandt s paintings in the possession of the Gemaldegalerie Alte Meister 122 and in the Gemaldegalerie Alte Meister Kassel 123 was conducted by Hermann Kuhn in 1977 The pigment analyses of some thirty paintings have shown that Rembrandt s palette consisted of the following pigments lead white various ochres Vandyke brown bone black charcoal black lamp black vermilion madder lake azurite ultramarine yellow lake and lead tin yellow Synthetic orpiment was shown in the shadows of the sleeve of the jewish groom This toxic arsenic yellow was rarely used in oil painting 124 One painting Saskia van Uylenburgh as Flora 125 reportedly contains gamboge Rembrandt very rarely used pure blue or green colors the most pronounced exception being Belshazzar s Feast 126 127 in the National Gallery in London The book by Bomford 126 describes more recent technical investigations and pigment analyses of Rembrandt s paintings predominantly in the National Gallery in London The entire array of pigments employed by Rembrandt can be found at ColourLex 128 The best source for technical information on Rembrandt s paintings on the web is the Rembrandt Database containing all works of Rembrandt with detailed investigative reports infrared and radiography images and other scientific details 129 Name and signature edit nbsp Slaughtered Ox 1655 now housed in Musee du Louvre in Paris Rembrandt is a modification of the spelling of the artist s first name that he introduced in 1633 Harmenszoon indicates that his father s name is Harmen van Rijn indicates that his family lived near the Rhine 130 Rembrandt s earliest signatures c 1625 consisted of an initial R or the monogram RH for Rembrant Harmenszoon and starting in 1629 RHL the L stood presumably for Leiden In 1632 he used this monogram early in the year then added his family name to it RHL van Rijn but replaced this form in that same year and began using his first name alone with its original spelling Rembrant In 1633 he added a d and maintained this form consistently from then on proving that this minor change had a meaning for him whatever it might have been This change is purely visual it does not change the way his name is pronounced Curiously enough despite the large number of paintings and etchings signed with this modified first name most of the documents that mentioned him during his lifetime retained the original Rembrant spelling Note the rough chronology of signature forms above applies to the paintings and to a lesser degree to the etchings from 1632 presumably there is only one etching signed RHL v Rijn the large format Raising of Lazarus B 73 131 His practice of signing his work with his first name later followed by Vincent van Gogh was probably inspired by Raphael Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo who then as now were referred to by their first names alone 132 Workshop edit nbsp One of van de Cappelle s 500 Rembrandt drawingsRembrandt ran a large workshop and had many pupils The list of Rembrandt pupils from his period in Leiden as well as his time in Amsterdam is quite long mostly because his influence on painters around him was so great that it is difficult to tell whether someone worked for him in his studio or just copied his style for patrons eager to acquire a Rembrandt A partial list should include 133 Ferdinand Bol Adriaen Brouwer Gerrit Dou Willem Drost Heiman Dullaart Gerbrand van den Eeckhout Carel Fabritius Govert Flinck Hendrick Fromantiou Aert de Gelder Samuel Dirksz van Hoogstraten Abraham Janssens Godfrey Kneller Philip de Koninck Jacob Levecq Nicolaes Maes Jurgen Ovens Christopher Paudiss Willem de Poorter Jan Victors and Willem van der Vliet Museum collections edit nbsp The Rembrandt House MuseumThe largest collections of Rembrandt s work are in the United States in the Metropolitan Museum of Art mostly portraits and the Frick Collection in New York City the National Gallery of Art in Washington D C Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and J Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles in total 86 paintings 134 Other large groups are in Germany with 69 paintings at the Gemaldegalerie in Berlin Gemaldegalerie Alte Meister in Dresden and Schloss Wilhelmshohe in Kassel and elsewhere The UK has a total of 51 especially in the National Gallery and Royal Collection There are 49 in the Netherlands many in the Rijksmuseum which has The Night Watch and The Jewish Bride and the Mauritshuis in The Hague 135 Others can be found in The Louvre the Hermitage Museum and Nationalmuseum Stockholm The Royal Castle in Warsaw displays two paintings by Rembrandt 136 The largest collections of drawings are in the older large museums such as the Rijksmuseum Louvre and British Museum All major print rooms have large collections of Rembrandt prints although as some exist in only a single impression no collection is complete The degree to which these collections are displayed to the public or can easily be viewed by them in the print room varies greatly The Rembrandt House Museum has fittings and furniture that are mostly not original but period pieces comparable to those Rembrandt might have had and those in the many drawings and etchings set in the house and contemporary paintings reflecting Rembrandt s use of the house for art dealing His printmaking studio has been set up with a printing press where replica prints are printed The museum has a few early Rembrandt paintings many loaned but an important collection of his prints a good selection of which are on rotating display Influence and recognition editFurther information Old master print Etching Revival Rembrandt Research Project List of things named after Rembrandt van Rijn List of works about Rembrandt List of Rembrandt pupils and List of Rembrandt connoisseurs and scholars nbsp A Rembrandt statue and the sculptures of The Night Watch in 3D at the Rembrandtplein in Amsterdam nbsp In 1775 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe then 25 years old wrote in a letter that I live wholly with Rembrandt ich zeichne kunstle p Und lebe ganz mit Rembrandt At the age of 81 1831 Goethe wrote the essay Rembrandt der Denker Rembrandt the Thinker published in his posthumous collection 137 138 I maintain that it did not occur to Protogenes Apelles or Parrhasius nor could it occur to them were they return to earth that I am amazed simply to report this a youth a Dutchman a beardless miller could bring together so much in one human figure and express what is universal All honor to thee my Rembrandt To have carried Illium indeed all Asia to Italy is a lesser achievement than to have brought the laurels of Greece and Italy to Holland the achievement of a Dutchman who has seldom ventured outside the walls of his native city Constantijn Huygens Lord of Zuilichem possibly the earliest known notable Rembrandt connoisseur and critic 1629 Excerpt from the manuscript Autobiography of Constantijn Huygens Koninklijke Bibliotheek Den Haag originally published in Oud Holland 1891 translated from the Dutch 139 Rembrandt is one of the most famous 140 141 and the best expertly researched visual artists in history 142 143 His life and art have long attracted the attention of interdisciplinary scholarship such as art history socio political history 144 cultural history 145 education humanities philosophy and aesthetics 146 psychology sociology literary studies 147 anatomy 148 medicine 149 religious studies n 150 theology 151 Jewish studies 152 Oriental studies Asian studies 153 global studies 154 and art market research 155 He has been the subject of a vast amount of literature in genres of both fiction and nonfiction Research and scholarship related to Rembrandt is an academic field in its own right with many notable connoisseurs and scholars 156 and has been very dynamic since the Dutch Golden Age 142 157 143 According to art historian and Rembrandt scholar Stephanie Dickey Rembrandt earned international renown as a painter printmaker teacher and art collector while never leaving the Dutch Republic In his home city of Leiden and in Amsterdam where he worked for nearly forty years he mentored generations of other painters and produced a body of work that has never ceased to attract admiration critique and interpretation Rembrandt s art is a key component in any study of the Dutch Golden Age and his membership in the canon of artistic genius is well established but he is also a figure whose significance transcends specialist interest Literary critics have pondered Rembrandt as a cultural text novelists playwrights and filmmakers have romanticized his life and in popular culture his name has become synonymous with excellence for products and services ranging from toothpaste to self help advice 143 Francisco Goya often considered to be among the last of the Old Masters said I have had three masters Nature Velazquez and Rembrandt Yo no he tenido otros maestros que la Naturaleza Velazquez y Rembrandt 158 159 160 In the history of the reception and interpretation of Rembrandt s art it was the significant Rembrandt inspired revivals or rediscoveries in 18th 19th century France 161 162 Germany 163 164 165 and Britain 166 167 168 169 that decisively helped in establishing his lasting fame in subsequent centuries 170 When a critic referred to Auguste Rodin s busts in the same vein as Rembrandt s portraits the French sculptor responded Compare me with Rembrandt What sacrilege With Rembrandt the colossus of Art What are you thinking of my friend We should prostrate ourselves before Rembrandt and never compare anyone with him 171 Vincent van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo 1885 Rembrandt goes so deep into the mysterious that he says things for which there are no words in any language It is with justice that they call Rembrandt magician that s no easy occupation 172 Rembrandt and the Jewish world edit See also History of the Jews in Amsterdam nbsp The Jewish Bride c 1665 1669 now housed at Rijksmuseum Vincent van Gogh s wrote in 1885 I should be happy to give 10 years of my life if I could go on sitting here in front of this picture The Jewish Bride for a fortnight with only a crust of dry bread for food In a letter to his brother Theo Vincent wrote What an intimate what an infinitely sympathetic picture it is 173 In his works he exhibited knowledge of classical iconography A depiction of a biblical scene was informed by Rembrandt s knowledge of the specific text his assimilation of classical composition and his observations of Amsterdam s Jewish population 174 Because of his empathy for the human condition he has been called one of the great prophets of civilization 175 Rembrandt had a considerable influence on many modern Jewish artists writers and scholars art critics and art historians in particular 176 177 The German Jewish painter Max Liebermann said Whenever I see a Frans Hals I feel like painting whenever I see a Rembrandt I feel like giving up 178 Marc Chagall wrote in 1922 Neither Imperial Russia nor the Russia of the Soviets needs me They don t understand me I am a stranger to them and he added I m certain Rembrandt loves me 179 Rembrandt regarded the Bible as the greatest Book in the world and held it in reverent affection all his life in affluence and poverty in success and failure He never wearied in his devotion to biblical themes as subjects for his paintings and other graphic presentations and in these portrayals he was the first to have the courage to use the Jews of his environment as models for the heroes of the sacred narratives Franz Landsberger a German Jewish emigre to America the author of Rembrandt the Jews and the Bible 1946 180 181 Criticism of Rembrandt edit nbsp Rembrandt Memorial Marker in the Westerkerk section of AmsterdamRembrandt has also been one of the most controversial visual artists in history 142 182 Several of Rembrandt s notable critics include Constantijn Huygens Joachim von Sandrart 183 Andries Pels who called Rembrandt the first heretic in the art of painting 184 Samuel van Hoogstraten Arnold Houbraken 183 Filippo Baldinucci 183 Gerard de Lairesse Roger de Piles John Ruskin 185 and Eugene Fromentin 182 By 1875 Rembrandt was already a powerful figure projecting from historical past into the present with such a strength that he could not be simply overlooked or passed by The great shadow of the old master required a decided attitude A late Romantic painter and critic like Fromentin was if he happened not to like some of Rembrandt s pictures he felt obliged to justify his feeling The greatness of the dramatic old master was for artists of about 1875 not a matter for doubt Either I am wrong Fromentin wrote from Holland or everybody else is wrong When Fromentin realized his inability to like some of the works by Rembrandt he formulated the following comments I even do not dare to write down such a blasphemy I would get ridiculed if this is disclosed Only about twenty five years earlier another French Romantic master Eugene Delacroix when expressing his admiration for Rembrandt has written in his Journal a very different statement perhaps one day we will discover that Rembrandt is a much greater painter than Raphael It is a blasphemy which would make hair raise on the heads of all the academic painters In 1851 the blasphemy was to put Rembrandt above Raphael In 1875 the blasphemy was not to admire everything Rembrandt had ever produced Between these two dates the appreciation of Rembrandt reached its turning point and since that time he was never deprived of the high rank in the art world Rembrandt scholar Jan Bialostocki 1972 182 In popular culture edit See also Category Cultural depictions of Rembrandt nbsp The Rembrandt statue in Leiden One thing that really surprises me is the extent to which Rembrandt exists as a phenomenon in pop culture You have this musical group call sic the Rembrandts who wrote the theme song to Friends I ll Be There For You There are Rembrandt restaurants Rembrandt hotels art supplies and other things that are more obvious But then there s Rembrandt toothpaste Why on Earth would somebody name a toothpaste after this artist who s known for his really dark tonalities It doesn t make a lot of sense But I think it s because his name has become synonymous with quality It s even a verb there s a term in underworld slang to be Rembrandted which means to be framed for a crime And people in the cinema world use it to mean pictorial effects that are overdone He s just everywhere and people who don t know anything who wouldn t recognize a Rembrandt painting if they tripped over it you say the name Rembrandt and they already know that this is a great artist He s become a synonym for greatness Rembrandt scholar Stephanie Dickey in an interview with Smithsonian Magazine December 2006 141 While shooting The Warrens of Virginia 1915 Cecil B DeMille had experimented with lighting instruments borrowed from a Los Angeles opera house When business partner Sam Goldwyn saw a scene in which only half an actor s face was illuminated he feared the exhibitors would pay only half the price for the picture DeMille remonstrated that it was Rembrandt lighting Sam s reply was jubilant with relief recalled DeMille For Rembrandt lighting the exhibitors would pay double 186 Works about Rembrandt edit See also Category Works about Rembrandt Literary works e g poetry and fiction edit To the Picture of Rembrandt a Russian language poem by Mikhail Lermontov 1830 Gaspard de la nuit Fantaisies a la maniere de Rembrandt et de Callot a series of French language poems by Aloysius Bertrand 1842 Picture This a novel by Joseph Heller 1988 Moi la Putain de Rembrandt a French language novel by Sylvie Matton 1998 Van Rijn a novel by Sarah Emily Miano 2006 I Am Rembrandt s Daughter a novel by Lynn Cullen 2007 The Rembrandt Affair a novel by Daniel Silva 2011 The Anatomy Lesson a novel by Nina Siegal 2014 Rembrandt s Mirror a novel by Kim Devereux 2015Music edit The Donna Summer song Dinner with Gershwin contain the lyrics I want to watch Rembrandt sketch The Scott Walker singer song Duchess features the lyrics It s your Bicycle bells and your Rembrandt swells Films edit The Stolen Rembrandt a 1914 film directed by Leo D Maloney and J P McGowan The Tragedy of a Great Die Tragodie eines Grossen a 1920 film directed by Arthur Gunsburg The Missing Rembrandt a 1932 film directed by Leslie S Hiscott Rembrandt a 1936 film directed by Alexander Korda Rembrandt a 1940 film Rembrandt in de schuilkelder Rembrandt in the Bunker a 1941 film directed by Gerard Rutten Rembrandt a 1942 film directed by Hans Steinhoff Rembrandt A Self Portrait a 1954 documentary film by Morrie Roizman Rembrandt schilder van de mens Rembrandt Painter of Man a 1957 film directed by Bert Haanstra Rembrandt fecit 1669 a 1977 film directed by Jos Stelling The Warriors a 1979 film featuring a graffiti artist called Rembrandt Rembrandt The Public Eye and the Private Gaze a 1992 documentary film by Simon Schama Rembrandt a 1999 film directed by Charles Matton Rembrandt Fathers amp Sons it a 1999 film directed by David Devine Stealing Rembrandt a 2003 film directed by Jannik Johansen and Anders Thomas Jensen Simon Schama s Power of Art Rembrandt a 2006 BBC documentary film series by Simon Schama Nightwatching a 2007 film directed by Peter Greenaway Rembrandt s J Accuse a 2008 documentary film by Peter Greenaway Rembrandt en ik nl a 2011 film directed by Marleen Gorris Schama on Rembrandt Masterpieces of the Late Years a 2014 documentary film by Simon Schama Rembrandt From the National Gallery London and Rijksmuseum Amsterdam a 2014 documentary film by Exhibition on ScreenSelected works edit nbsp Rembrandt Laughing 1628 now housed in J Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles nbsp The Girl in a Picture Frame 1641 now housed at Royal Castle in Warsaw nbsp The evangelist Matthew and the Angel 1661 The Entombment of Christ c 1624 Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery Glasgow The Stoning of Saint Stephen 1625 Musee des Beaux Arts Lyon Andromeda Chained to the Rocks 1630 Mauritshuis The Hague Old Man with a Gold Chain c 1631 Art Institute of Chicago Jacob de Gheyn III 1632 Dulwich Picture Gallery London Philosopher in Meditation 1632 The Louvre Paris The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp 1632 Mauritshuis The Hague Judith at the Banquet of Holofernes 1634 Museo del Prado Madrid Descent from the Cross 1634 Hermitage Museum St Petersburg Looted from the Landgrave of Hesse Kassel in 1806 citation needed Belshazzar s Feast c 1635 1638 National Gallery London The Prodigal Son in the Tavern c 1635 Gemaldegalerie Alte Meister Dresden Danae c 1635 reworked before 1643 Hermitage Museum St Petersburg The Scholar at the Lectern 1641 Royal Castle Warsaw The Girl in a Picture Frame 1641 Royal Castle Warsaw The Night Watch formally The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq 1642 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Boaz and Ruth 1643 Woburn Abbey Bedfordshire amp Gemaldegalerie Berlin The Mill 1645 48 National Gallery of Art Washington D C Susanna and the Elders 1647 Gemaldegalerie Berlin Christ Healing the Sick also known as the Hundred Guilder Print c 1648 Allen Memorial Art Museum Oberlin Ohio Name derives from a print seller who claimed to have sold an impression of the print back to Rembrandt for 100 Guilders Head of Christ 1648 Gemaldegalerie Berlin Aristotle Contemplating a Bust of Homer 1653 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York The Three Crosses 1653 Museum of Fine Arts Boston Bathsheba at Her Bath 1654 The Louvre Paris Christ Presented to the People c 1655 Various versions at different museums One of the two largest prints made by Rembrandt Pallas Athena c 1657 Calouste Gulbenkian Museum Lisbon Portrait of Dirck van Os c 1658 Joslyn Art Museum Omaha Nebraska Self Portrait with Beret and Turned Up Collar 1659 National Gallery of Art Washington D C Ahasuerus and Haman at the Feast of Esther 1660 Pushkin Museum Moscow The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis c 1661 1662 Nationalmuseum Stockholm The majority of the original painting is now lost as Rembrandt cut it up in order for it to be sold It is also his last secular history painting Syndics of the Drapers Guild 1662 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam The Jewish Bride c 1665 1669 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Haman before Esther 1665 National Museum of Art of Romania Bucharest 187 Self Portrait at the Age of 63 1669 National Gallery London One of Rembrandt s last self portraits The Return of the Prodigal Son 1669 Hermitage Museum St Petersburg One of Rembrandt s last paintings Exhibitions edit nbsp Moving Rembrandt s The Night Watch for the 1898 Rembrandt ExhibitionSept Oct 1898 Rembrandt Tentoonstelling Rembrandt Exhibition Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam the Netherlands 188 Jan Feb 1899 Rembrandt Tentoonstelling Rembrandt Exhibition Royal Academy London 188 21 April 2011 18 July 2011 Rembrandt and the Face of Jesus Musee du Louvre 189 16 September 2013 14 November 2013 Rembrandt The Consummate Etcher Syracuse University Art Galleries 190 19 May 2014 27 June 2014 From Rembrandt to Rosenquist Works on Paper from the NAC s Permanent Collection National Arts Club 191 19 October 2014 4 January 2015 Rembrandt Rubens Gainsborough and the Golden Age of Painting in Europe Jule Collins Smith Museum of Art 192 15 October 2014 18 January 2015 Rembrandt The Late Works The National Gallery London 193 12 February 2015 17 May 2015 Late Rembrandt The Rijksmuseum Amsterdam 194 16 September 2018 6 January 2019 Rembrandt Painter as Printmaker Denver Art Museum Denver 195 24 August 2019 1 December 2019 Leiden circa 1630 Rembrandt Emerges Agnes Etherington Art Centre Kingston Ontario 196 4 October 2019 2 February 2020 Rembrandt s Light Dulwich Picture Gallery London 197 18 February 2020 30 August 2020 Rembrandt and Amsterdam portraiture 1590 1670 Museo Nacional Thyssen Bornemisza Madrid 198 10 August 2020 1 November 2020 Young Rembrandt Ashmolean Museum Oxford 199 Paintings editSelf portraits edit Main article Self portraits by Rembrandt nbsp A young Rembrandt c 1628 when he was 22 Partly an exercise in chiaroscuro Rijksmuseum nbsp Self Portrait in a Gorget c 1629 at Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg nbsp Self portrait 1630 at Nationalmuseum in Stockholm nbsp Self Portrait with Velvet Beret and Furred Mantle 1634 nbsp Self Portrait at the Age of 34 1640 at the National Gallery in London nbsp Self Portrait an oil on canvas portrait 1652 at Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna nbsp Self portrait 1655 an oil on walnut portrait cut down in size at Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna nbsp Self Portrait 1660 nbsp Self Portrait as Zeuxis c 1662 one of two self portraits in which Rembrandt is turned to the left 200 at Wallraf Richartz Museum in Cologne nbsp Self Portrait with Two Circles c 1665 69 at Kenwood House in London nbsp Self portrait 1669 nbsp Self Portrait at the Age of 63 1669 the year he died at National Gallery in London nbsp Rembrandt Self portrait 1668 69 Galleria degli Uffizi FlorenceOther major paintings edit nbsp The Stoning of Saint Stephen 1625 Rembrandt s first painting completed at the age of 19 201 It is currently kept in the Musee des Beaux Arts de Lyon nbsp Two old men disputing 1628 at the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne nbsp Artist in His Studio 1628 at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston nbsp Bust of an old man with a fur hat 1630 a painting of Rembrandt s father nbsp Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem c 1630 nbsp Andromeda c 1630 nbsp The Philosopher in Meditation c 1632 nbsp Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp c 1632 nbsp Portrait of Aeltje Uylenburgh 1632 at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston nbsp Portrait of a Young Woman 1632 at Allentown Art Museum in Allentown Pennsylvania nbsp Portrait of Saskia van Uylenburgh c 1633 34 nbsp Flora 1634 at Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg Russia nbsp Sacrifice of Isaac 1634 at Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg Russia nbsp The Rape of Ganymede 1635 at Staatliche Kunstsammlungen in Dresden nbsp The Blinding of Samson 1636 which Rembrandt gave to Huyghens nbsp Susanna 1636 nbsp Belshassar s Feast c 1636 38 nbsp Danae c 1636 43 at Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg Russia nbsp The Archangel Raphael Leaving Tobias Family 1637 at the Louvre in Paris nbsp The Landscape with Good Samaritan 1638 at Czartoryski Museum in Krakow nbsp Scholar at his Writing Table 1641 at Royal Castle in Warsaw nbsp Joseph s Dream c 1645 nbsp Susanna and the Elders 1647 nbsp The Mill 1648 nbsp An Old Man in Red c 1652 54 at Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg Russia nbsp Aristotle with a Bust of Homer 1653 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City nbsp Young Girl at the Window 1654 at Nationalmuseum in Stockholm nbsp Portrait of Jan Six a painting of a wealthy friend of Rembrandt 1654 nbsp Bathsheba at Her Bath modelled by Hendrickje 1654 nbsp A Woman Bathing in a Stream modelled by Hendrickje 1654 nbsp Pallas Athene c 1655 nbsp The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Deijman 1656 nbsp Jacob Blessing the Sons of Joseph 1656 nbsp Woman in a Doorway 1657 58 nbsp Ahasuerus and Haman at the Feast of Esther 1660 at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow Russia nbsp The Incredulity of St Thomas 1660 at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow Russia nbsp Saint Bartholomew 1661 at J Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles nbsp The Syndics of the Drapers Guild 1662 nbsp The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis cut down 1661 62 nbsp Lucretia 1666 at the Minneapolis Institute of Art in Minneapolis Minnesota nbsp The Return of the Prodigal Son c 1669 at Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg RussiaDrawings and etchings editRembrandt drawings at the Albertina nbsp Self portrait c 1628 29 pen and brush and ink on paper nbsp Self portrait in a cap with eyes wide open 1630 etching and burin nbsp Seated Old Man c 1630 red and black chalk on paper Nationalmuseum Stockholm nbsp Suzannah and the Elders 1634 drawing in Sanguine on paper Kupferstichkabinett Berlin nbsp Self portrait with Saskia 1636 etching Rijksmuseum nbsp An elephant 1637 drawing in black chalk on paper Albertina Austria nbsp Self portrait leaning on a Sill 1639 etching National Gallery of Art nbsp Christ and the woman taken in adultery c 1639 41 drawing in ink Louvre nbsp Beggars I c 1640 42 ink on paper Warsaw University Library nbsp The Windmill 1641 etching nbsp The Diemerdijk at Houtewael near Amsterdam 1648 49 pen and brown ink brown wash Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen nbsp The Three Crosses 1653 drypoint etching state III of V Museum of Fine Arts Boston nbsp Virgin and Child with a Cat 1654 original copper etching plate above the original copper plate in Victoria and Albert Museum example of the print below nbsp Christ presented to the People drypoint etching 1655 state I of VIII Rijksmuseum nbsp Two Old Men in Conversation Two Jews in Discussion Walking year unknown black chalk and brown ink on paper Teylers Museum nbsp A child being taught to walk c 1635 David Hockney said I think it s the greatest drawing ever done It s a magnificent drawing magnificent 102 nbsp A young woman sleeping c 1654 Shows Rembrandt s calligraphic style draughtsmanship 105 106 Notes edit This version of his first name Rembrandt with a d first appeared in his signatures in 1633 Until then he had signed with a combination of initials or monograms In late 1632 he began signing solely with his first name Rembrant He added the d in the following year and stuck to this spelling for the rest of his life Although scholars can only speculate this change must have had a meaning for Rembrandt which is generally interpreted as his wanting to be known by his first name like the great figures of the Italian Renaissance Leonardo Raphael etc who did not sign with their last names if at all 9 Rembrandt promised the owner a woman with mental problems to pay a quarter of the purchase price within a year 21 the rest within five to six years For some reason the purchase was not registered at the town hall and had to be renewed in 1653 22 Their son Rombartus died two months after his birth and their daughter Cornelia died at just three weeks of age A second daughter also named Cornelia died after living barely over a month His children were christened in Dutch Reformed churches in Amsterdam four in the Old Church and Titus in the Southern Church 26 Five years later he didn t support her release without the presence of her brother a sailor In August 1656 Geertghe Dircx was listed as one of Rembrandt s seven major creditors Quite a few people were in debt after the First Anglo Dutch War 35 The Dutch were driven from Brazil too the Brazilian Adventure cost the Dutch merchant community dearly 36 Jan van de Capelle bought 500 of the drawings prints by Lucas van Leyden Hercules Seghers and Goltzius among others Useful totals of the figures from various different oeuvre catalogues often divided into classes along the lines of very likely authentic possibly authentic and unlikely to be authentic are given at the Online Rembrandt catalogue 69 Two hundred years ago Bartsch listed 375 More recent catalogues have added three two in unique impressions and excluded enough to reach totals as follows Schwartz pp 6 289 Munz 1952 279 Boon 1963 287 Print Council of America but Schwartz s total quoted does not tally with the book It is not possible to give a total as a new wave of scholarship on Rembrandt drawings is still in progress analysis of the Berlin collection for an exhibition in 2006 7 has produced a probable drop from 130 sheets there to about 60 Codart nl 70 The British Museum is due to publish a new catalogue after a similar exercise While the popular interpretation is that these paintings represent a personal and introspective journey it is possible that they were painted to satisfy a market for self portraits by prominent artists Van de Wetering p 290 Such as Otto Benesch 99 100 101 David Hockney 102 Nigel Konstam Jakob Rosenberg Gary Schwartz and Seymour Slive 103 104 The Rijksmuseum has a smaller copy of what is thought to be the full original composition It is important to note that Rembrandt s religious affiliation was uncertain There is little evidence that Rembrandt formally belonged to any Christian denomination References edit a b c Or possibly 1607 as on 10 June 1634 he himself claimed to be 26 years old See Is the Rembrandt Year being celebrated one year too soon One year too late Archived 21 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine and in Dutch J de Jong Rembrandts geboortejaar een jaar te vroeg gevierd Archived 18 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine for sources concerning Rembrandt s birth year especially supporting 1607 However most sources continue to use 1606 Rembrandt Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary See list of drawings prints etchings and paintings by Rembrandt a b Gombrich p 420 Gombrich p 427 Clark 1969 p 203 Robert Fucci 2020 Rembrandt and the Business of Prints How Rembrandt van Rijn Changed the Art of Etching Forever 28 December 2017 Rembrandt Signature Files www rembrandt signature file com Archived from the original on 9 April 2016 Bull et al p 28 a b in Dutch Rembrandt biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen 1718 by Arnold Houbraken courtesy of the Digital library for Dutch literature Joris van Schooten as teacher of Rembrandt and Lievens Archived 26 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Simon van Leeuwen s Korte besgryving van het Lugdunum Batavorum nu Leyden Leiden 1672 Slive has a comprehensive biography pp 55ff Schwarz G 1987 Rembrandt p 134 Slive pp 60 65 Slive pp 60 61 Netherlands Noord Holland Province Church Records 1553 1909 Image Netherlands Noord Holland Province Church Records 1553 1909 pal MM9 3 1 TH 1971 31164 16374 68 Familysearch org Archived from the original on 5 June 2016 Retrieved 7 April 2014 Registration of the banns of Rembrandt and Saskia kept at the Amsterdam City Archives a b c Bull et al p 28 a b Rijksmuseum Rijksmuseum Anrooij Wim van Hoftijzer Paul 28 June 2017 Vijftien strekkende meter Nieuwe onderzoeksmogelijkheden in het archief van de Bibliotheca Thysiana Uitgeverij Verloren ISBN 9789087046842 via Google Books a b c Rembrandt s boedelafstand door jhr mr J F Backer Elseviers Geillustreerd Maandschrift Jaargang 29 DBNL Adams p 660 Pieter C Vis Andries de Graeff 1611 1678 t Gezagh is heerelyk doch vol bekommeringen PDF Portrait of Andries de Graeff 1611 1678 Burgomaster of Amsterdam The Leiden Collection Doopregisters Zoek in Dutch Amsterdam City Archive Retrieved 7 March 2023 a b Slive p 71 Indexen archief amsterdam Crenshaw Paul 2006 Rembrandt s bankruptcy the artist his patrons and the art market in seventeenth century Nederlands Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521858250 OCLC 902528433 Dircks Geertje ca 1610 1656 Resources Huygens ING C Driessen pp 151 157 G Schwartz pp 292 293 Slive p 82 Rembrandt Voetnoot org Dehing P 2012 Geld in Amsterdam Wisselbank en wisselkoersen 1650 1725 Universiteit van Amsterdam p 142 Professor P C Emmer review of The Rise of Commercial Empires England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism 1650 1770 review no 345 https reviews history ac uk review 345 Date accessed 26 March 2023 Wexuan Li Review of Rembrandts plan De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement Oud Holland Reviews April 2020 Broos B 1999 Das Leben Rembrandts van Rijn 1606 1669 In Rembrandt Selbstbildnisse p 79 a b Drie vragen aan Machiel Bosman Rembrandts plan Faillissement Rembrandt van Rijn C M in t Veld 2019 Rembrandts boedelafstand een institutionele en politieke benadering Wexuan Li Review of Rembrandts plan De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement Oud Holland Reviews April 2020 a b M Bosman 2019 Rembrandts plan De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement Crenshaw P 2006 Rembrandt s Bankruptcy The artist his patrons and the art market in seventeenth century Netherlands pp 61 76 Ruysscher Dave De Veld Cornelis In T 26 April 2021 Rembrandt s insolvency The artist as legal actor Oud Holland Journal for Art of the Low Countries 134 1 9 24 doi 10 1163 18750176 13401002 S2CID 236619973 Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 via brill com Schwartz 1984 pp 288 291 Slive p 84 Inventarissen archief amsterdam Dudok van Heel S A C 1969 De Rembrandt s in de verzamelingen Hinlopen In Maandblad Amstelodamum pp 233 237 In Dutch Inventarissen archief amsterdam Wexuan Li Review of Rembrandts plan De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement Oud Holland Reviews April 2020 Clark 1974 p 105 De geldzaken van Rembrandt Stadsarchief Amsterdam Clark 1974 pp 60 61 Bull et al p 29 Jan Veth 1906 Rembrandt s verwarde zaken DBNL Ruysscher Dave De Veld Cornelis In T 26 April 2021 Rembrandt s insolvency The artist as legal actor Oud Holland Journal for Art of the Low Countries 134 1 9 24 doi 10 1163 18750176 13401002 S2CID 236619973 Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 via brill com Bailly M Ch le Bailly Maria Charlotte Le 28 June 2008 Hof van Holland Zeeland en West Friesland de hoofdlijnen van het procederen in civiele zaken voor het Hof van Holland Zeeland en West Friesland zowel in eerste instantie als in hoger beroep Uitgeverij Verloren ISBN 978 9087040567 via Google Books Wexuan Li Review of Rembrandts plan De ware geschiedenis van zijn faillissement Oud Holland Reviews April 2020 380 Whitewashing Rembrandt part 2 Gary Schwartz Art Historian 1 March 2020 Clark 1978 p 34 Burial register of the Westerkerk with record of Rembrandt s burial kept at the Amsterdam City Archives Cornelia van Rijn Dudok van Heel S A C 1987 Dossier Rembrandt pp 86 88 Rembrandt made a mess of his legal and financial life Leiden University 16 November 2021 Rembrandt s insolvency No preconceived plan but smart entrepreneurship VUB 2021 Hughes p 6 A Web Catalogue of Rembrandt Paintings 28 July 2012 Archived from the original on 28 July 2012 Institute Member Login Institute for the Study of Western Civilization Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 A Web Catalogue of Rembrandt Paintings Archived from the original on 13 May 2012 Retrieved 10 July 2007 Rembrandt der Zeichner Archived from the original on 27 May 2016 Retrieved 3 October 2007 Schwartzlist 301 Blog entry by the Rembrandt scholar Gary Schwartz Garyschwartzarthistorian nl 3 January 2010 Archived from the original on 22 February 2012 Retrieved 17 February 2012 White and Buvelot 1999 p 10 Taylor Michael 2007 Rembrandt s Nose Of Flesh amp Spirit in the Master s Portraits Archived 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine p 21 D A P Distributed Art Publishers Inc New York ISBN 978 1933045443 Durham p 60 Bull et al pp 11 13 Clough p 23 Clark 1978 p 28 van der Wetering p 268 van de Wetering pp 160 190 Ackley p 14 a b c van de Wetering p 284 van de Wetering p 285 van de Wetering p 287 van de Wetering p 286 van de Wetering p 288 van de Wetering pp 163 165 van de Wetering p 289 van de Wetering pp 155 165 van de Wetering pp 157 158 190 In Rembrandt s late great portraits we feel face to face with real people we sense their warmth their need for sympathy and also their loneliness and suffering Those keen and steady eyes that we know so well from Rembrandt s self portraits must have been able to look straight into the human heart Gombrich p 423 It The Jewish Bride is a picture of grown up love a marvelous amalgam of richness tenderness and trust the heads which in their truth have a spiritual glow that painters influenced by the classical tradition could never achieve Clark p 206 Schwartz 1994 pp 8 12 White 1969 pp 5 6 White 1969 p 6 White 1969 pp 6 9 10 White 1969 pp 6 7 Christiaan Vogelaar amp Gregor J M Weber 2006 Rembrandts Landschappen See Schwartz 1994 where the works are divided by subject following Bartsch Benesch Otto The Drawings of Rembrandt First Complete Edition in Six Volumes London Phaidon 1954 57 Benesch Otto Rembrandt as a Draughtsman An Essay with 115 Illustrations London Phaidon Press 1960 Benesch Otto The Drawings of Rembrandt A Critical and Chronological Catalogue 2nd ed 6 vols London Phaidon 1973 a b Lewis Tim 16 November 2014 David Hockney When I m working I feel like Picasso I feel I m 30 The Guardian Archived from the original on 16 May 2020 Retrieved 16 June 2020 David Hockney 2014 There s a drawing by Rembrandt I think it s the greatest drawing ever done It s in the British Museum and it s of a family teaching a child to walk so it s a universal thing everybody has experienced this or seen it happen Everybody I used to print out Rembrandt drawings big and give them to people and say If you find a better drawing send it to me But if you find a better one it will be by Goya or Michelangelo perhaps But I don t think there is one actually It s a magnificent drawing magnificent Slive Seymour The Drawings of Rembrandt A New Study London Thames amp Hudson 2009 Silve Seymour The Drawings of Rembrandt London Thames amp Hudson 2019 a b Mendelowitz Daniel Marcus Drawing New York Holt Rinehart amp Winston Inc 1967 p 305 As Mendelowitz 1967 noted Probably no one has combined to as great a degree as Rembrandt a disciplined exposition of what his eye saw and a love of line as a beautiful thing in itself His Winter Landscape displays the virtuosity of performance of an Oriental master yet unlike the Oriental calligraphy it is not based on an established convention of brush performance It is as personal as handwriting a b Sullivan Michael The Meeting of Eastern and Western Art Berkeley Los Angeles University of California Press 1989 p 91 Schrader Stephanie et al eds Rembrandt and the Inspiration of India Archived 1 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles CA J Paul Getty Museum 2018 ISBN 978 1606065525 Rembrandt and the Inspiration of India catalogue PDF Archived PDF from the original on 18 October 2019 Retrieved 18 October 2019 In Paintings Rembrandt amp his Mughal India Inspiration 3 September 2017 Archived from the original on 23 May 2018 Retrieved 12 May 2018 Ganz James 2013 Rembrandt s Century San Francisco CA Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco p 45 ISBN 978 3791352244 Belien H amp P Knevel 2006 Langs Rembrandts roem pp 92 121 John Russell 1 December 1985 Art View In Search of the Real Thing The New York Times Archived from the original on 1 July 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2017 The Rembrandt Research Project Past Present Future PDF Archived PDF from the original on 22 August 2014 Retrieved 11 August 2014 See Further Battles for the Lisowczyk Polish Rider by Rembrandt Zdzislaw Zygulski Jr Artibus et Historiae Vol 21 No 41 2000 pp 197 205 Also New York Times story Archived 8 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine There is a book on the subject Responses to Rembrandt Who painted the Polish Rider by Anthony Bailey New York 1993 Schama Simon 1999 Rembrandt s Eyes Knopf p 720 Schama pp 582 591 Rembrandt Pilate Washing His Hands Oil Painting Reproduction Outpost Art Archived from the original on 12 January 2015 Retrieved 1 January 2015 Entertainment Lost Rembrandt works discovered BBC News 23 September 2005 Archived from the original on 22 December 2006 Retrieved 7 October 2009 Brown Mark 23 May 2014 Rembrandt expert urges National Gallery to rethink demoted painting The Guardian archived from the original on 21 September 2016 retrieved 21 December 2015 Rembrandt was not always the perfectly consistent logical Dutchman he was originally anticipated to be Ackley p 13 van de Wetering p x Kuhn Hermann Untersuchungen zu den Pigmenten und Malgrunden Rembrandts durchgefuhrt an den Gemalden der Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Dresden Examination of pigments and grounds used by Rembrandt analysis carried out on paintings in the Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Dresden Maltechnik Restauro issue 4 1977 223 233 Kuhn Hermann Untersuchungen zu den Pigmenten und Malgrunden Rembrandts durchgefuhrt an den Gemalden der Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Kassel Examination of pigments and grounds used by Rembrandt analysis carried out on paintings in the Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Kassel Maltechnik Restauro volume 82 1976 25 33 Van Loon A Noble P Krekeler A van der Snickt G Janssens K Abe Y Nakai I amp Dik J 2017 Artificial orpiment a new pigment in Rembrandt s palette Heritage Science 5 26 Rembrandt Saskia as Flora Archived 15 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine ColourLex a b Bomford D et al Art in the making Rembrandt New edition Yale University Press 2006 Rembrandt Belshazzar s Feast Pigment analysis Archived 7 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine at ColourLex Resources Rembrandt ColourLex Archived from the original on 24 February 2021 Retrieved 23 February 2021 The Rembrandt Database Archived from the original on 23 August 2015 Retrieved 6 July 2015 Roberts Russell Rembrandt Mitchell Lane Publishers 2009 ISBN 978 1612287607 p 13 Chronology of his signatures pdf Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine with examples Source www rembrandt signature file com Slive p 60 Rembrandt pupils under Leraar van in the RKD Clark 1974 pp 147 150 See the catalogue in Further reading for the location of all accepted Rembrandts G Schwartz 1987 Rembrandt zijn leven zijn schilderen The Lanckoronski Collection Rembrandt s Paintings zamek krolewski pl Archived from the original on 20 May 2014 Retrieved 20 May 2014 The works of art which Karolina Lanckoronska gave to the Royal Castle in 1994 was one of the most invaluable gift s made in the museum s history Munz Ludwig Die Kunst Rembrandts und Goethes Sehen Leipzig Verlag Heinrich Keller 1934 Van den Boogert B et al Goethe en Rembrandt Tekeningen uit Weimar Uit de grafische bestanden van de Kunstsammlungen zu Weimar aangevuld met werken uit het Goethe Nationalmuseum Amsterdam Amsterdam University Press 1999 Binstock Benjamin Vermeer s Family Secrets Genius Discovery and the Unknown Apprentice New York Routledge 2009 p 330 Golahny Amy 2001 The Use and Misuse of Rembrandt An Overview of Popular Reception Archived 8 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine Dutch Crossing Journal of Low Countries Studies 25 2 305 322 Solman Paul 21 June 2004 Rembrandt s Journey PBS org Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2018 Paul Solman 2004 Rembrandt The most famous brand name in western art In America alone it graces toothpaste bracelet charms restaurant and bars counter tops and of course the town of Rembrandt Iowa just halfway around the world from the Rembrandt Hotel in Bangkok Thailand Valiunas Algis 25 December 2006 Looking at Rembrandt The Weekly Standard Archived from the original on 16 December 2018 Retrieved 25 April 2020 Algis Valiunas 2006 Alongside Leonardo and Michelangelo Rembrandt is one of the three most famous artists ever with whom the public is on a first name basis and the name Rembrandt has lent the cachet of greatness and the grace of familiarity to sell everything from kitchen countertops to whitening toothpaste to fancy hotels in Bangkok and Knightsbridge a b Crawford Amy 12 December 2006 An Interview with Stephanie Dickey author of Rembrandt at 400 Smithsonian Magazine Archived from the original on 21 September 2018 Retrieved 10 October 2018 a b c Slive Seymour Rembrandt and his Critics 1630 1730 The Hague Martinus Nijhoff 1953 a b c Franits Wayne ed The Ashgate Research Companion to Dutch Art of the Seventeenth Century Burlington VT Ashgate 2016 Negri Antonio The Savage Anomaly The Power of Spinoza s Metaphysics and Politics Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1991 Ahmad Iftikhar 2008 Art in Social Studies Exploring the World and Ourselves with Rembrandt The Journal of Aesthetic Education 42 2 19 37 Molyneux John 5 July 2019 The Dialectics of Art Rebelnews ie 2019 Archived from the original on 30 June 2020 Retrieved 25 June 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Works cited edit Ackley Clifford et al Rembrandt s Journey Museum of Fine Arts Boston 2004 ISBN 0 87846 677 0 Adams Laurie Schneider 1999 Art Across Time Volume II New York McGraw Hill College Bomford D et al Art in the making Rembrandt New edition Yale University Press 2006 Bull Duncan et al Rembrandt Caravaggio Rijksmuseum 2006 Buvelot Quentin White Christopher eds Rembrandt by himself 1999 National Gallery Clark Kenneth 1969 Civilisation a personal view New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 010801 4 Clark Kenneth An Introduction to Rembrandt 1978 London John Murray Readers Union 1978 Clough Shepard B 1975 European History in a World Perspective D C Heath and Company Los Lexington MA ISBN 978 0 669 85555 5 Driessen Christoph Rembrandts vrouwen Bert Bakker Amsterdam 2012 ISBN 978 90 351 3690 8 Durham John I 2004 Biblical Rembrandt Human Painter in a Landscape of Faith Mercer University Press ISBN 978 0 86554 886 2 Gombrich E H The Story of Art Phaidon 1995 ISBN 0 7148 3355 X Hughes Robert 2006 The God of Realism The New York Review of Books vol 53 no 6 The Complete Etchings of Rembrandt Reproduced in Original Size Gary Schwartz editor New York Dover 1988 ISBN 0 486 28181 7 Slive Seymour Dutch Painting 1600 1800 Yale UP 1995 ISBN 0 300 07451 4 van de Wetering Ernst in Rembrandt by himself 1999 National Gallery London Mauritshuis The Hague ISBN 1 85709 270 8 van de Wetering Ernst Rembrandt The Painter at Work Amsterdam University Press 2000 ISBN 0 520 22668 2 White Christopher The Late Etchings of Rembrandt 1999 British Museum Lund Humphries London ISBN 978 90 400 9315 9Further reading editFurther information List of works about Rembrandt Catalogue raisonne Stichting Foundation Rembrandt Research Project A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings Volume I which deals with works from Rembrandt s early years in Leiden 1629 1631 1982 A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings Volume II 1631 1634 Bruyn J Haak B et al Band 2 1986 ISBN 978 90 247 3339 2 A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings Volume III 1635 1642 Bruyn J Haak B Levie S H van Thiel P J J van de Wetering E Ed Hrsg Band 3 1990 ISBN 978 90 247 3781 9 A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings Volume IV Ernst van de Wetering Karin Groen et al Springer Dordrecht the Netherlands ISBN 1 4020 3280 3 p 692 Self Portraits Rembrandt Images and metaphors Christian and Astrid Tumpel editors Haus Books London 2006 ISBN 978 1 904950 92 9 Anthony M Amore Tom Mashberg 2012 Stealing Rembrandts The Untold Stories of Notorious Art Heists St Martin s Publishing ISBN 978 0 230 33990 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rembrandt nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Rembrandt A biography of the artist Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn from the National Gallery London Works and literature on Rembrandt from Pubhist com The Drawings of Rembrandt a revision of Otto Benesch s catalogue raisonne by Martin Royalton Kisch in progress Rembrandt s house in Amsterdam Site of the Rembrandt House Museum in Amsterdam with images of many of his etchings 114 artworks by or after Rembrandt at the Art UK site Works by or about Rembrandt at Internet Archive Rembrandt van Rijn General Resources The transparent connoisseur 3 the 30 million pound question by Gary Schwartz Rembrandt The Rembrandt Database research data on the paintings including the full contents of the first volumes of A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings by the Rembrandt Research Project Die Urkunden uber Rembrandt by C Hofstede de Groot 1906 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rembrandt amp oldid 1195591380, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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