Rembrandt van Rijn

Rembrandt van Rijn

▪ Dutch artist
Introduction
in full  Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn  Rembrandt originally spelled  Rembrant 
born July 15, 1606, Leiden, Netherlands
died October 4, 1669, Amsterdam
 Dutch painter and printmaker, one of the greatest storytellers in the history of art, possessing an exceptional ability to render people in their various moods and dramatic guises. Rembrandt is also known as a painter of light and shade and as an artist who favoured an uncompromising realism that would lead some critics to claim that he preferred ugliness to beauty.

      Early in his career and for some time, Rembrandt painted mainly portraits. Although he continued to paint—and etch and, occasionally, draw—portraits throughout his career, he did so less frequently over time. Roughly one-tenth of his painted and etched oeuvre consists of studies of his own face as well as more formal self-portraits, a fact that has led to much speculation.

      The core of Rembrandt's oeuvre, however, consists of biblical and—to a much lesser extent—historical, mythological, and allegorical “history pieces,” all of which he painted, etched, or sketched in pen and ink or chalk. Seen over his whole career, the changes in Rembrandt's style are remarkable. His approach to composition and his rendering of space and light—like his handling of contour, form, and colour, his brushwork, and (in his drawings and etchings) his treatment of line and tone—are subject to gradual (or sometimes abrupt) transformation, even within a single work. The painting known as Night Watch (1640/42) was clearly a turning point in his stylistic development. These changes are not the result of an involuntary evolution; rather they should be seen as documenting a conscious search in pictorial and narrative respects, sometimes in discussion, as it were, with his great predecessors.

      Rembrandt quickly achieved renown among Dutch art lovers and an art-buying public for his history paintings and etchings, as well as his portraits and self-portraits. His unusual etchings brought him international fame during his lifetime, and his drawings, which in fact were done as practice exercises or as studies for other works, were also collected by contemporary art lovers.

      According to the myth that evolved after his death, Rembrandt died poor and misunderstood. It is true that by the end of his life his realism had been supplanted by Classicism (Classicism and Neoclassicism) and had become unfashionable in Holland. Nevertheless, his international reputation among connoisseurs and collectors only continued to rise. Certain artists in 18th-century Germany and Venice even adopted his style. He was venerated during the Romantic era and was considered a forerunner of the Romantic movement; from that point he was regarded as one of the greatest figures in art history. In The Netherlands itself, his fortunes have once again risen, and he has become a symbol of both greatness and Dutch-ness.

Early years
      Rembrandt was the fourth of 6 surviving children out of 10. Unlike many painters of his time, he did not come from a family of artists or craftsmen; his father, Harmen Gerritszoon van Rijn (1568–1630), was a miller. His mother, Neeltgen Willemsdochter van Zuytbrouck (1568–1640), came from a family of bakers.

      The first name Rembrandt was—and still is—extremely rare. It is akin to more common Dutch first names such as Remmert, Gerbrand, or IJsbrand. The way Rembrandt inscribed his name on his work evolved significantly. As a young man he signed his work only with the monogram RH (Rembrant Harmenszoon, “son of Harmen”); from 1626/27, with RHL; and in 1632, with RHL van Rijn (the L in the monogram presumably standing for Leidensis, “from Leiden,” the town in which he was born). At age 26, he began to sign his work with his first name only, Rembrant (ending only with a -t); from early 1633 onward until his death, he spelled his name Rembrandt (with -dt) and signed his works that way. It has been suggested that he began using his first name as his signature because he considered himself the equal of the great artists of the 15th and 16th centuries— Michelangelo (Michelangelo Buonarroti), Titian (Tiziano Vecellio), and Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio) were also generally known by their first names.

      Like most Dutch children of his day, Rembrandt attended elementary school (c. 1612–16), after which, from roughly 1616 to 1620, he attended the Latin School in Leiden, where biblical studies and classics were the main subjects taught. The school's emphasis on oratory skills may have contributed to his ability to “stage” the figures in scenes depicted in his history paintings, drawings, and etchings. It is not clear whether Rembrandt completed his course of study at the Latin School. His first biographer, Jan Janszoon Orlers (1570–1646), provided a laudatory half-page biography of Rembrandt within his Beschrijvinge der stadt Leyden (1641; “Description of the Town of Leiden”). There Orlers wrote that Rembrandt was taken out of school prematurely and, at his own request, was sent to be trained as a painter. The fact that Rembrandt was enrolled in Leiden University on May 20, 1620, does not necessarily contradict this. Whether for tax reasons or simply because they had attended the Latin School, it was not unusual for Leiden boys to be registered as students without being expected to attend any lectures. The extent of Rembrandt's intellectual development and any possible influence this might have had on his work remain matters of speculation.

      From approximately 1620 to 1624/25, Rembrandt trained as an artist. As was quite common in his time, he had two masters in succession. Rembrandt's first master was the Leiden painter Jacob van Swanenburgh (1571–1638), with whom, according to Orlers, he remained for about three years. Van Swanenburgh must have taught him the basic skills and imparted the knowledge necessary for the profession. He was a specialist in architectural pieces and in scenes of hell and the underworld, which called for skill in painting fire and its reflections on the surrounding objects. In Rembrandt's time this skill was considered distinct and demanding. It may well be that Rembrandt's early exposure to this kind of pictorial problem underlies his lasting interest in the effects of light.

      Rembrandt's second teacher, Pieter Lastman (Lastman, Pieter) (1583–1633), lived in Amsterdam. According to Orlers, Rembrandt stayed with him for six months. Working with Lastman, who was well known at that time as a history painter, must have helped Rembrandt gain the knowledge and skill necessary to master that genre. History painting involved placing various figures from biblical, historical, mythological, or allegorical scenes in complex settings. In the 17th-century hierarchy of the various genres, history painting held the highest position because it required a complete command of all subjects, from landscape to architecture, from still-life to drapery, from animals to, above all, the human figure, in a wide range of postures, expressions, and costumes. One Rembrandt biographer, Arnold Houbraken (Houbraken, Arnold) (1660–1719), also mentions another Amsterdam history painter, Jakob Pynas (c. 1585–1650), as one of Rembrandt's teachers. (In 1718 Houbraken wrote the most extensive early biography and characterization of Rembrandt as an artist, although it was mixed with spurious anecdotes.)

      On the basis of stylistic arguments one could speculate on the impact that Jan Lievens (Lievens, Jan) (1607–74) may have had on Rembrandt during his training. Lievens, one year younger than Rembrandt and originally a child prodigy, was already a full-fledged artist by the time Rembrandt must have decided to become a painter. Although scholars know for certain only that Rembrandt and Lievens worked closely together for some years after Rembrandt had returned to Leiden about 1625, following his training with Lastman, the contacts between these two Leiden boys may have begun earlier. However, no trace of Rembrandt's student exercises has survived.

The Leiden period (1625–31)
      Over the course of 1625, Rembrandt settled in Leiden as an independent master. During the following six years, he laid the foundations for many of his subsequent works and preoccupations. His earliest paintings relied heavily on Lastman's work. In several instances, he took apart, as it were, the colourful compositions by Lastman and reassembled them into new compositions. (Later, although in a less drastic fashion, Rembrandt's own pupils would also produce variations on the basis of Rembrandt's own works.) For an aspiring painter, this was one of the typical methods employed to develop a personal style under a master's guidance. Given the fact, however, that Rembrandt painted his variations on Lastman's prototypes after he had returned to Leiden as an independent young master, one can speculate that Rembrandt actually may have been trying to emulate his former teacher by choosing the latter's subjects but completely “rephrasing” them.

      During his Leiden period, Rembrandt's production as a painter was mainly devoted to small-scale history paintings and tronies (single figures in historicizing, Oriental, or imaginary costumes that connote old age, piety, soldierly bravery, the Orient, transience, and so on). Tronies were not meant to be portraits, although individuals must have posed for them (among them Rembrandt himself, in the mirror). Also during this period, Rembrandt may have shared a studio with Lievens, who, like Rembrandt, had received his final training with Lastman—although six years earlier. The two young painters experimented with the consistency of paint, attempting to use variations in the paint surface to render different materials. It may well be that Lievens had a stronger influence on Rembrandt in these early years than vice versa. The fact that, about 1630, they both several times painted the same subject (such as the Raising of Lazarus) might suggest that they were competing with each other.

      In 1628 or 1629 Rembrandt finished the Judas Repentant and, among other works, painted The Artist in His Studio. After amazingly rapid changes in style from 1625 onward, Rembrandt reached a first major peak in his artistic development in the late 1620s.

      The paintings he created soon after leaving Lastman still have a waxworks quality, with evenly lit, colourful figures acting in a clearly organized space. The revolutionary change that took place in Rembrandt's style between about 1627 and 1629 involved the role of light. By concentrating the light and by exaggerating the diminuendo of the force of light in relation to the distance from the light source, Rembrandt arrived at what could crudely be termed “spotlight (chiaroscuro)” effects. In order to create convincing light effects, Rembrandt—like Caravaggio, his great Italian precursor in this field—had to compensate by leaving large areas shrouded in shadow.

      In 1628, in particular in the Peter and Paul Disputing, Rembrandt developed a method by which the lit elements in the painting are basically clustered in one area, in such a manner that little shadow is needed to separate the various forms. By assembling light hues of yellow, blue, pink, green, and other colours, he developed a system of bevriende kleuren (“kindred or related colours”). This area of the painting was surrounded by coherent clusters of darker tones that occupied the foreground and background and especially the edges and corners of the work. Through this method Rembrandt not only created a concentrated, almost furnacelike, intensity of the light, but he also obtained a strong unity in his composition. This unity enabled the viewer's eye to grasp the image in one glance, before focusing on the details.

      In order to achieve this result, Rembrandt had to sacrifice strong, saturated colours, since these would impair the desired effect. He also had to sacrifice much detail in order to maintain tonal unity throughout the painting. One could speculate that these pictorial dilemmas eventually led to an artistic crisis that may have become manifest during the work on Night Watch (see below), which was in fact meant to be a scene lit by daylight.

      Other developments in Rembrandt's Leiden period, such as his activity as an etcher and a teacher, would also prove to be important for his whole artistic career.

 About 1628 Rembrandt made his first etchings. Unlike drawing, etching is not a natural counterpart to painting, and his decision to begin etching meant taking a significant new direction in his career. Much of his international fame during his lifetime would be based on the widely disseminated prints he produced from the 300 or so etchings he made over the course of his career.

      Analysis of Rembrandt's early etched oeuvre gives the impression that he was basically self-taught in this field. Whereas Rembrandt's contemporaries adopted the regular, almost stylized manner of applying lines and hatchings that could be found in the much more common copper engravings, Rembrandt almost from the outset used a much freer technique, which at first strikes the viewer as uncontrolled, even nervous. Thanks to this new technique, however, he succeeded in developing a method of working that appears partly sketchlike, yet which could also be described as painterly. The painterly quality of his etchings is mainly due to the way in which he achieved an extraordinarily suggestive play of light and dark and how he created a convincing sense of atmospheric space using different methods of hatching.

 As early as the 18th century, specialists had thoroughly described and explored Rembrandt's etched oeuvre, mainly for the benefit of print collectors. In the process, much attention was paid to the different stages—the so-called “states”—through which many of Rembrandt's etchings evolved as well as to the striking variety of papers upon which the etchings were printed. The latter fact led to the general belief that Rembrandt printed his etchings himself. About 1990 the technique of X-ray radiography was applied to the watermarks on the paper; this technique has made it possible to reconstruct editions of prints and, as a result, to obtain greater insight into Rembrandt's studio practice in this field.

Teaching
      From 1628 to 1663, Rembrandt had pupils. Gerrit Dou (Dou, Gerrit) (1613–75), who was later in life noted as a painter of meticulously executed genre paintings and portraits, was probably the first. Over the years Rembrandt's fame attracted many young men—some from abroad—who were ambitious to study with him once they had completed their basic training elsewhere. It seems that Rembrandt never took beginners. Great talents such as Govaert Flinck (Flinck, Govert), Carel Fabritius (Fabritius, Carel), and Aert de Gelder (Gelder, Aert de) were among these students. Scholars know of the existence of Rembrandt's individual pupils mainly by chance, since the official registers of painters' trainees have been lost in both Leiden and Amsterdam. Only a rough estimate of the number of his pupils is possible. Over his entire career as a teacher (between 1628 and c. 1663) there must certainly have been 50 or so, and possibly many more. The German artist Joachim von Sandrart (1606–88), who lived in Amsterdam from 1637 to about 1645, referred to “countless pupils” who studied and worked with Rembrandt.

      A pupil's parents had to pay Rembrandt an annual tuition fee of 100 guilders, a substantial sum, especially since Rembrandt, contrary to custom, did not provide boarding for these young men. According to von Sandrart, this fee, coupled with the sale of his pupils' works, added substantially to Rembrandt's income. It is likely that a number of Rembrandt's pupils—including Isack Jouderville (1613–before 1648), an orphan from Leiden—stayed on as studio assistants for some time. Rembrandt's students learned, as was common practice in 17th-century studios, by copying their master's works and, later, by painting and drawing more or less free variations based on them. A passage in Houbraken's biography of Rembrandt, confirmed by an archival document from 1658, states that pupils worked in an attic in separate cubicles partitioned by sailcloth or paper.

First Amsterdam period (1631–35/36)
      In 1631 Rembrandt entered a business relationship with Hendrick Uylenburgh (1584 or 1589–c. 1660), an Amsterdam entrepreneur in paintings who had a large workshop that painted portraits, carried out restorations, and produced copies, among other activities. Rembrandt apparently had already planned or was inspired by Uylenburgh to leave Leiden, then in decline, for Amsterdam, which was thriving.

      Settling in another town and there becoming a master of the guild—which was essential, since in principle this status alone gave one the formal right to sell work in that town—was not, however, a simple matter. It is known from the guild archives of several towns that a master aspiring to settle elsewhere had first to serve an obligatory period of one or two years in the workshop of a local master before he could be admitted to the guild. This may be the reason that Rembrandt moved into Uylenburgh's workshop and, over the course of about four years, worked in his service, probably as head of the workshop.

      Whether Rembrandt had already moved to Amsterdam in 1631 is a point of controversy. Some Rembrandt specialists defend the idea that for several years he commuted between Leiden and Amsterdam. The two towns were then separated by the Haarlemmermeer (a large lake since drained), traversable by regular transport service. It is known, however, that Rembrandt became a member of the Amsterdam St. Luke's guild only in 1634, the same year that he married Uylenburgh's niece, Saskia van Uylenburgh (1612–42).

Portraits
 From 1631 to 1635, in Uylenburgh's workshop, Rembrandt produced a substantial number of portraits (mainly pairs of pendants) and some group portraits, such as The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp (1632). He must have conquered the Amsterdam portrait market rapidly. Partly relying on his experience as a history painter, he succeeded in producing much livelier portraits than those created by the specialized portrait painters who had dominated the Amsterdam scene before his arrival. By limiting the amount of detail and using simple but dynamic contours, Rembrandt avoided distracting the viewer's attention. He led the eye primarily to the face and the suggested movement of the figure. He was also exceptionally good at rendering human skin convincingly.

      There is doubt, however, about Rembrandt's ability to capture the likeness of his sitters. Constantijn Huygens (Huygens, Constantijn), a Dutch diplomat, intellectual, and art connoisseur who discusses Rembrandt in an autobiography about his youth, wrote some epigrammatic Latin verses occasioned by a portrait of one of his friends that Rembrandt had painted in 1632. In these verses, he wittily mocked the inadequacy of the portrait's likeness. The doubt that Rembrandt's portraiture was accurate is only exacerbated when one compares his authentic self-portraits with one another. The physiognomic differences between these images are considerable. In cases where it is possible to compare a portrait by Rembrandt with portraits of the same model by other painters, one has the impression that the likeness produced by Rembrandt was the least accurate. This seems to be the case, for instance, in his portrait of the famous, banned Remonstrant preacher Johannes Wtenbogaert (1577–1644), who was also portrayed by Michiel Janszoon van Miereveld and Jacob Adriaenszoon Backer.

      Stylistic analysis of his portraits reveals that Rembrandt occasionally had others assist him to a varying degree in the painting of portraits, as indeed was the custom in many portrait studios. For example, Wtenbogaert's portrait session with Rembrandt is recorded in a written document; back in Holland for some weeks, the preacher recorded in his diary that on April 13, 1633, he posed for Rembrandt during only that one day. Parts of this portrait, such as the preacher's hands, were clearly painted by a studio assistant, no doubt after the sitter had left the studio.

Rembrandt and religion
      In his years with Uylenburgh, Rembrandt also made history paintings, mainly biblical scenes. A number of these works, in the form of grisailles, were apparently done with an ambitious series of prints in mind, which together were to constitute a Passion series (unfinished). The fact that Rembrandt represented so many biblical stories, evidently basing them on a strict reading of Old and New Testament texts, has always given rise to speculation as to the nature of his religious beliefs and denomination.

      In fact, it is still unknown whether Rembrandt belonged to any religious community or, if so, to which. Filippo Baldinucci (Baldinucci, Filippo), an Italian abbot and art connoisseur, claimed in 1686 that Rembrandt was an Anabaptist. But Rembrandt could not have belonged to the Anabaptist brotherhood (as Uylenburgh did, for example) since he had his own children baptized as infants (a practice specifically repudiated by Anabaptists). In other respects too, such as his manner of dress, he did not fit the profile of this sectarian type of Protestantism. Because Rembrandt's father belonged to the Reformed Church, while his mother was and remained a Roman Catholic, it may well be that their son was one of those Christians who deliberately avoided membership in any congregation. There was a ban at the time on the open practice of Catholic rites and, during Rembrandt's Leiden years, a fierce antagonism between the Remonstrant and Contra-Remonstrant communities (the issue being the Calvinist doctrine of predestination). Rembrandt may have preferred not to take sides.

      In a self-portrait of 1661, Rembrandt depicted himself as St. Paul. This could perhaps be seen as an indication that he was among those who were deliberately opposed to religious antagonisms as such: in the Epistle to the Corinthians, Paul had warned against sectarian tendencies among the early Christians (1 Corinthians 3: 4–8; 21–22). It has also been suggested that Rembrandt believed that the gulf between Jews and Christians should be bridged. His close collaboration and possible friendship with the enlightened Rabbi Manasseh ben Israel, a strong advocate of reconciliation between Jews and Christians, may be an indication of this. That Rembrandt depicted so many Jews and Old Testament figures with such evident sympathy would further support this idea.

Rembrandt and Rubens
      During Rembrandt's early Amsterdam period, the towering presence of Peter Paul Rubens (Rubens, Peter Paul) was often felt. For a long time Rembrandt scholars tended to speak of Rubens's influence on Rembrandt whenever they attempted to explain the Rubensian elements in Rembrandt's work. But perhaps it is more appropriate to see Rembrandt as measuring himself against Rubens—as seen, for example, in a comparison of Rembrandt's Descent from the Cross (1632/33) with the print after Rubens's Descent from the Cross that Rembrandt unquestionably used. Such a comparison shows that Rembrandt had fundamentally transformed Rubens's heroic pathos into a powerful realism that evokes in the viewer a deep sense of involvement in Christ's suffering.

      Rembrandt must, however, have taken Rubens as a model for his own artistic ambitions during this period. The aforementioned incomplete print series on the Passion, for which Rembrandt did various oil sketches to be executed by professional engravers, is one example of this, as it reflected the grandness of Rubens's various projects. In his early Amsterdam years Rembrandt also created a number of allegorical and history paintings with life-size figures that show an ambition reminiscent of that of Rubens. There are various indications that he must have painted such works on his own initiative. In fact, they may have served primarily as demonstration pieces. In this respect, Rembrandt contrasts sharply with Rubens, who produced his life-size allegories and history pieces with the help of a well-organized workshop for various European courts and churches.

      It is documented that Rembrandt presented a large painting to Constantijn Huygens—who was at that time secretary to Prince Frederik Hendrik (1584–1647), the Dutch stadholder—as a gift in appreciation of Huygens's having acted as an intermediary with the stadholder's court. In view of the measurements documented, the painting concerned could have been either the Blinding of Samson or the Danaë (both from 1636) in its original form. It seems that Huygens did not accept the gift.

      In sad contrast to Rubens, Rembrandt received only one substantial commission from a court. Huygens had seen Rembrandt's Leiden masterpiece, the Judas Repentant from 1628/29, in the studio and had greatly admired it for its narrative qualities. Acting as mediator to the court from roughly 1630 onward, he encouraged the prince to buy several paintings by Rembrandt. These purchases continued until 1646, and for the greater part they concerned paintings that together were to form a Passion series, with seven painted scenes from the life of Christ. Contacts with the stadholder's court, however, remained infrequent. If one were to assume that Rembrandt had ambitions to become a court painter (a role that Gerard van Honthorst (Honthorst, Gerrit van) would fulfill from his Utrecht (Utrecht school) workshop), one has to conclude that he failed. Moreover, while Rubens's works for the various courts generally involved large paintings with life-size figures, Rembrandt's Passion series for Frederik Hendrik consisted of modestly sized paintings crowded with small figures.

      It is possible that some of Rembrandt's history paintings were bought by patrons of his portraiture, however. Sometimes history pieces are found listed in inventories that also list portraits by Rembrandt. This could well indicate that some sitters took advantage of the occasion to acquire one of Rembrandt's history paintings.

Second Amsterdam period (1635–42)

Growing fame
      By the end of 1635, Rembrandt had left the house of Uylenburgh and established himself independently with his family. In 1639, after a period of living and working in rented dwellings, he bought a large house, built in 1606 and adjacent to the house in which he had begun his Amsterdam career with Uylenburgh. Rembrandt paid less than one third of the full price. The debt he left unpaid would later cause him great trouble. Rembrandt lived and worked in this house for almost 20 years. (Since 1906 it has been the home of the Rembrandt House Museum.)

      Rembrandt must have experienced the years around 1640 as the high point of his career. His fame had spread rapidly. An Englishman traveling through the Netherlands in 1640 noted in his diary:

As for the art off Painting and the affection off these people [the Dutchmen] to Pictures, I thincke none other goe beeyond them, there having bin in this Country Many excellent Men in thatt Faculty, some att Presentt, as Rimbrantt, etts.

      In 1641 Orlers noted that Rembrandt was “so talented that he has since become one of the most esteemed painters of this century.”

      In Rembrandt's day there was a fast-growing but distinct interest in art and artists, with a public that was designated as Liefhebbers van de Schilderkonst (“Lovers of the Art of Painting”). The art lover's main purpose was to understand paintings so as to be able to discuss them with other devotees and, preferably, with painters as well. Both the artist and the art lover of Rembrandt's day were inspired by the special relationship between Alexander the Great and his court painter, Apelles (as recounted by Pliny the Elder), and the almost equal footing that Titian enjoyed with Emperor Charles V. They admired and identified with these great role models of the past in terms of both the mutual relationship enjoyed by artist and patron and the importance each attached to the pursuit of the art of painting and to the deeper knowledge of that art—a mixture of art history, art theory, and technical understanding. Studio visits became popular. Texts written by artists for art lovers, and some by the latter themselves, give the impression that the insights gained from studio visits to a great extent concerned the “miracle” of creating an illusion of reality on a flat surface, the pictorial and technical means employed in creating that illusion, and the many aspects of the reality that was to be rendered—such as the natural grouping of the figures in a painting, the proportions of the figures and the expressiveness of their poses and gestures, the play of light and its reflections, the natural rendering of draped fabrics, the use of colour, and so on.

      The phenomenon of the art lovers and their studio visits may be key to understanding Rembrandt's self-portraits. The greater part of Rembrandt's activity in front of the mirror has long been considered to be a highly personal quest for the “self.” According to the latest insights, however, these works must be seen, on the one hand, as portraits of an uomo famoso (“famous man”) and, on the other hand, as specimens of the reason for that fame: Rembrandt's singular style and his exceptional technique in painting and etching.

 In a number of his self-portraits, Rembrandt is wearing various types of antiquated dress. These costumes have been identified as allusions to great predecessors. For instance, the 16th-century northern European costume he is wearing in his famous 1640 self-portrait presumably referred to Albrecht Dürer (Dürer, Albrecht), a fellow great peintre-graveur whom Rembrandt greatly admired and tried to emulate.

      The 1640 self-portrait belongs to a category of paintings that could be termed trompe l'oeil works. With these paintings viewers are momentarily deceived by the sensation that they are in the same space as the painting's subject, forgetting that they are looking at a flat surface and subsequently experiencing the pleasure of this deception. Among Rembrandt's paintings from the period 1639–42 there are also still lifes with dead birds, portraits, and group portraits that use trompe l'oeil tricks. Some of his pupils of that period, including Samuel van Hoogstraten, Fabritius, and Rembrandt's German pupil, Christoph Paudiss (1630–66), continued to exploit trompe l'oeil effects.

Night Watch
      The artist with whom Rembrandt was most preoccupied during the second half of the 1630s was Leonardo da Vinci, and in particular his Last Supper (1495–98), which Rembrandt knew from a reproduction print. It is evident from several of Rembrandt's sketched variants (1635) on Leonardo's composition that he was above all intrigued by the problem of the symmetry/asymmetry in the grouping of the figures. The Wedding of Samson (1638) can be seen as Rembrandt's attempt to surpass Leonardo in the challenge set by this compositional problem and as an effort to accomplish a much livelier scene than Leonardo had achieved in his Last Supper.

 In 1640–42 Rembrandt must have been occupied mainly with the large group portrait depicting members of an Amsterdam civic militia company. In a family album belonging to the captain of the company, the work is described as: “the…captain gives order to his lieutenant,…to march out his company of citizens.” This implies that the 34 figures in the painting—actually only 18 militia men out of a company of some 100 men who had decided to have themselves portrayed, plus the 16 extras Rembrandt had added in order to suggest a large group of people—were crowding together just before the company was to assemble for a parade.

      In his painting of this scene, which later would acquire the name the Night Watch, Rembrandt revolutionized the formula of the group portrait as part of his continuing effort to achieve the ultimate liveliness in his work. In the words of van Hoogstraten, Rembrandt's former pupil, “Rembrandt made the portraits that were commissioned subservient to the image as a whole.”

      According to van Hoogstraten, Night Watch was conceived by Rembrandt to be a unity (eenwezich). Rembrandt's intentions in this respect are difficult to appreciate in the painting's present state, since it has been trimmed on all sides, most of all on the left side. As a result, the figures of the captain and his lieutenant have moved to the centre and into the utmost foreground of the composition. A copy, painted by Gerrit Lundens (1622–after 1677) soon after the Night Watch was finished, shows that the original composition was much more dynamic and coherent than its present state indicates.

      The present condition of the painting also reveals the work's crucial problem, which is at the same time its most intriguing feature. Two intensely lighted figures dominate the composition: the girl in the middle ground and the lieutenant in the foreground. Both are clad in yellow costumes, which strengthens the light effect. Because of this double “spotlight” effect, the tonal values of the painting as a whole seem to be subdued. Consequently, the painting makes a dark impression that no doubt contributed to the epithet “Night Watch.” Van Hoogstraten, who had praised the unity in the Night Watch's composition, criticized his former master by complaining, “I would have preferred if he [Rembrandt] would have kindled more light into it.” Van Hoogstraten's remarks were published in his book on the art of painting. His notes on the subordination of the portraits to the conception as a whole, and the lack of light in the painting, have contributed to the myth of Night Watch being rejected and of Rembrandt's subsequent “fall.”

Third Amsterdam period (1643–58)

The myth of Rembrandt's fall
      In the decade following 1642, Rembrandt's production changed in several ways. His output of paintings diminished drastically, and the few paintings he made varied in subject, size, and style. Moreover, he produced no painted portraits, a fact that can be interpreted in two ways: either he did not receive any portrait commissions during that period or he did not accept such commissions for the decade. At the same time, he embarked on a number of extremely ambitious etchings, such as the portrait (1647) of his friend Jan Six (1618–1700) and especially the Hundred Guilder Print, a large (unfinished) print with episodes from chapter 19 of The Gospel According to Matthew.

      The sparseness of Rembrandt's production of painting in the period from 1643 to 1652 is one of the enigmas of his career. Speculations about what happened after he finished the Night Watch have contributed to the development of the “Rembrandt myth,” according to which Rembrandt became largely misunderstood and was ignored after 1642 and, as a consequence, suffered increasing financial difficulty, eventually dying in poverty. At the same time, according to this myth, his art deepened. The post-1642 Rembrandt would develop into the “real” Rembrandt, profoundly at one with his inner self and a classic example of a misunderstood genius. As art historian Jan Emmens argued in his book Rembrandt and the Rules of Art, the formation of this myth owes much to a standard biographical model that might be called the “Saul-Paul model”—according to which the subject's life suddenly undergoes a radical change in direction as the result of a crisis or conversion.

      The death of Rembrandt's wife, Saskia, and the presumed rejection of the Night Watch by those who commissioned it were long supposed to be the most important events leading to the presumed change in Rembrandt's life after 1642. But modern art-historical research has questioned the myth of a crisis in 1642, not least because there is simply insufficient evidence that the Night Watch was not accepted. The painting was paid for and remained exhibited in the place for which it was intended. Consequently, it cannot have been rejected. As to the other cause of the presumed turning point in Rembrandt's life, nothing is known about Rembrandt's feelings over the deaths of Saskia and three of the children they had together, although these and other aspects of his private life have been amply romanticized in the older Rembrandt literature. One must also take into account the omnipresence of premature death in the 17th century. Death during or after childbirth was a fate that awaited many women, while waves of the plague repeatedly ravaged Europe throughout the century, claiming many victims in Amsterdam.

      The “underrated genius” myth arose mainly out of the criticism of Rembrandt's art that was expressed after his death by some of his largely younger peers. On the face of it, a significant number of 17th-century writings seem to have portrayed Rembrandt in an unfavourable light. He was said to be a heretic in the field of painting or an artist who, with his use of impasto (locally applied thick paint), painted with “dung.”

      Such criticisms should be examined in light of the rise of Classicism (Classicism and Neoclassicism) imported from France, which had brought about a radical change in taste over the course of Rembrandt's later life. Rembrandt's drastic and uncompromising realism had no place in the universalizing and idealizing approach of Classicism. For example, von Sandrart, writing in 1675, was judging Rembrandt by the new ideology:

Adhering to the practice [Rembrandt] had adopted, he was prepared to challenge our rules of art, of anatomy, human proportions and perspective, arguing against the use of antique sculptures, against Raphael's draughtsmanship and the systematic training of young artists, and against the Academies, so vital to our profession, asserting that one should rely only upon nature and observe no other rules.

      Yet this criticism of Rembrandt was not an indication that his genius was underrated; on the contrary, as Emmens writes:

The criticism levelled against Rembrandt by the writers of the 1670s makes it clear that he was still the towering figure of an older, and now old-fashioned, generation of Dutch painters. That is why the blows of the classicistic attack, which could have been just as well delivered to any other painter of his generation, all fell on his head.

 Negative remarks from Rembrandt's critics were in fact almost always counterbalanced by the highest praise. The brilliant artist and writer on art Gérard de Lairesse (1640–1711), who met Rembrandt as a young man and was portrayed by him in 1665, confessed in 1707: “I do not want to deny that once I had a special preference for his manner; but at that time I had hardly begun to understand the infallible rules of art.” De Lairesse's laudatory words that follow explain why Rembrandt was admired:Everything that art and the brush can achieve was possible for him, and he was the greatest painter of the time and is still unsurpassed. For, they say, was there ever a painter who by means of colour came as close to nature by his beautiful light, lovely harmony, and unique, unusual thoughts [as to the narrative?] and so forth?

      But if criticism of Rembrandt's art became manifest only in the 1670s, how could the sudden decline in Rembrandt's production of paintings between 1643 and 1652 then be explained? It is not impossible that, after having painted the Night Watch, Rembrandt arrived at the awareness that he may have overstretched the possibilities of the pictorial language he had developed over the previous two decades. It seems as though he had reached an impasse with his spotlight effects. Might it be that in the end Rembrandt's crisis was an artistic crisis? This possibility seems to be strengthened by his apparent search for ways out of this cul-de-sac.

 The great variation in style in his sparse paintings from the decade after 1642 can be seen as an indication that Rembrandt was searching. A scene with the Holy Family (1645) is one of Rembrandt's most striking efforts to arrive at a different approach to the function of light in his paintings. Here, he introduced three light sources and made abundant use of light reflecting on one surface from another. In this painting he also introduced strong colour, through the glowing red of Mary's gown. Colour, which up to this point he had increasingly sacrificed to light, now returned—usually a strong red—in the centre of some of his images, such as Jakob's Blessing and, later, in the so-called Jewish Bride (see below). Compositions—which were often diagonal in early works by Rembrandt, according to the logic of the concentrated light—were now more frontally constructed.

 After creating several highly detailed images, such as The Woman Taken in Adultery (1644) and The Supper at Emmaus (1648), Rembrandt eventually seems to have sought the solution to his artistic “crisis” in a style grafted onto that of the late Titian, a style that was only effective when the painting was seen from a certain distance. Rembrandt's contribution to this Titianesque manner of painting was a deliberate use of impasto that created a light-reflecting surface in the lighter foreground passages of his paintings. His efforts to develop this new approach to painting started about 1645 and would bloom from the early 1650s onward. That period marks the beginning of what is usually called Rembrandt's “late style.”

Rembrandt's late style
      The most obvious aspect of Rembrandt's late style is that the brushwork is, in general, broader. Individual brushstrokes sometimes remain visible, although the differentiation in the brushwork is extraordinary. Another aspect of the late style is that the brushwork, on whatever scale applied, seems to be governed much more by chance than before. Specifically referring to Rembrandt's late style, Sir Joshua Reynolds (Reynolds, Sir Joshua) observed, in the 12th of his lectures published as Discourses on Art: “Work produced in an accidental manner, will have the same free, unrestrained air as the works of nature, whose particular combinations seem to depend upon accident.”

      This freedom of the hand, however, does not lead to gratuitous sketchiness. The mysterious quality of Rembrandt's later work is that the intensity of observation and the painterly execution seem only to have grown, compared to his earlier work. But whereas the brushwork is livelier, the figures in Rembrandt's later works are characterized by a remarkable stillness. In the early Rembrandt works, each gesture, each movement of the bodies was typified by the naetuereelste beweechgelickheijt (“the most natural liveliness”), fulfilling Rembrandt's aim to create convincing “drama.” Despite the near absence of gesture in his late work, however, the viewer senses that the image is not frozen but rather potentially dynamic. It may well be that the figures seem to be alive because of the vitality of the execution as well as the blurring of the forms that results from an “open” treatment of contours. No doubt it is the vitality of either the brushwork in the paintings or the line in the etchings and the drawings that contributes to this feeling of a continuous state of transition.

      In all this, light plays a new role, different from the role it played in the early works. From early on, one of Rembrandt's major concerns was the creation of a hierarchy in light intensity within a painting. In the works of the 1650s and '60s, this logic seems to develop a magic quality as well. While in the early works strong local light effects prevail, in the later works the space seems to be filled with light lingering around the figures. An example is the seemingly illogical way in which the light radiates from the bust of Homer in the Aristotle of 1653. The same phenomenon is evident in the figure of Jakob in Jakob's Blessing (1656) or in the Conspiracy of the Batavians (1661). The light reflecting in the space around some of the figures seems to act as a mysterious aura.

Domestic turmoil
      A number of events in Rembrandt's domestic life during the 1640s point to a crisis of another kind. A large number of documents have survived concerning marriage, childbirth, and Saskia's death, as well as the tensions between Saskia's family and Rembrandt over matters of inheritance after her death. A considerable volume of archival material also documents Rembrandt's legal problems with a woman by the name of Geertje Dirckx (1610/15–c. 1656), who after Saskia's death nursed Rembrandt's only surviving child, Titus (1641–68). Rembrandt must have gotten entangled in an intimate relationship with Dirckx, who had become his housekeeper. In 1649 Dirckx said that Rembrandt had promised to marry her. In that same year, the situation came to a climax when she pawned some of the jewelry that was part of Saskia's inheritance to Titus; she claimed to have received it as a present from Rembrandt. In 1650 Rembrandt arranged for Dirckx's confinement in the House of Correction (Spinhuis) at Gouda; she remained there until 1655.

      In 1649 Hendrickje Stoffels (1626–63), a young woman from Breedevoort in the eastern part of Gelderland, succeeded Dirckx, first in the function of housekeeper, later in Rembrandt's affection. The problems associated with Titus's inheritance prevented Rembrandt from marrying the young Stoffels, who bore him a child and lived with him as his common-law wife from 1649 until her death in 1663.

 Despite the artistic crisis of the 1640s, Rembrandt's fame certainly had not waned. Between 1652 and 1663 he sold several paintings to the nobleman Don Antonio Ruffo, from Messina in Sicily. It is clear from the correspondence concerning these commissions that Rembrandt's art, especially his etching work, was highly esteemed in Italy. Since Ruffo must have bought the first of these paintings, the famous Aristotle with a Bust of Homer, without knowing its subject, it must surely have been mainly Rembrandt's fame that attracted him. Van Hoogstraten in his book on painting refers to “name-buyers,” a phenomenon that apparently grew parallel to the emergence of the art lover. Once Ruffo was aware of the subject of his painting, he subsequently ordered an Alexander the Great (1662; lost in a fire) as a companion piece and a Homer Dictating to His Scribes (1662/63), which, though heavily damaged—probably in the same fire—is preserved in the Mauritshuis in The Hague.

      Despite this fame, in the first half of the 1650s Rembrandt increasingly incurred financial problems, brought on to a considerable extent by his own financial mismanagement. He had neglected to pay off the debt on the house he had bought in 1639. On top of that, he had not received or accepted portrait commissions since 1642. Calculations show that the sums he spent on his collection (see below) up to the year 1656, when he finally went bankrupt, would have been more than adequate to pay off the loan he had taken out to purchase his house.

Rembrandt's collecting
      Already in his Leiden period, Rembrandt may have started to build what was to become a richly varied personal collection. From 1628 onward, his works exhibit carefully depicted ethnographic and other exotic objects. In that period Rembrandt may have begun to assemble a collection of both naturalia (natural objects such as shells and coral) and artificialia (man-made objects such as medals, plaster casts from busts of Greek philosophers and Roman emperors, weapons, and musical instruments from a variety of cultures). This collection also contained numerous prints and paintings by other artists or after their works and, among other items, a number of Mughal miniatures (Mughal painting). The size and scope of this collection is known from the inventory of Rembrandt's possessions drawn up in 1656 when, along with the house, the entire collection had to be auctioned in a vain effort to meet the demands of his creditors. (A reconstruction of Rembrandt's collection—as it may have existed about 1650 and arranged in the way Rembrandt kept it in his kunstkamer [“art room”]—can be seen in the Rembrandt House Museum in Amsterdam.)

      The functional significance of this collection for Rembrandt is still not entirely clear. Was it just a varied range of studio props, or an accumulation of precious objects for trade? (It is known that Rembrandt was also active as an art dealer.) Or was it perhaps an encyclopaedic collection of the type that might enable the miller's son to move in higher circles as a gentleman virtuoso? As to the collection of prints and paintings, this must have been the source of Rembrandt's considerable art-historical knowledge, which at times became manifest in his own works. It is hard to escape the impression that, for Rembrandt, collecting must have been virtually an addiction. Having sold his house and moved to a much smaller rented house, Rembrandt soon began to collect again. By the time of his death, two rooms of that house had been filled with this new collection.

      But was he really ruined only by his collecting mania and his financial mismanagement concerning his house? The historical context provides another clue to his bankruptcy: it occurred at a time when many other artists went bankrupt and when other sorts of business concerns also ran into financial difficulties. It transpires that this wave of insolvencies coincided with or followed the first Anglo-Dutch War (Anglo-Dutch Wars) (1652–54), when a blockade of the Dutch coast dealt a severe blow to the country's trade with the East. There is evidence that it was precisely the manufacturers of luxury goods—and Rembrandt's expensive paintings can certainly be included in this category—who suffered most as a result. This general financial malaise caused by the blockade led creditors to call in their debts. The documentary evidence suggests that it was this effect of the war that was fatal for Rembrandt.

Fourth Amsterdam period (1658–69)
      Having sold his house in 1658, Rembrandt rented a house on the Rozengracht. In 1660 a contract was drawn up between Rembrandt, his son, Titus, and Hendrickje Stoffels. This was designed to protect Rembrandt from his creditors and to enable him to continue working. The agreement entailed that Rembrandt should “give aid and assistance” to the other two parties, and then it stipulated that “[Rembrandt] would live with them, receive free board, and be exempt from housekeeping expenses and rent on condition that he will aid the partners in every respect to the extent possible, and promote the business.” In reality, Rembrandt now worked in the service of his son and his common-law wife, as the agreement continued: “Having been granted some time ago cessio bonorum [conveyance of goods], the reason why he has given up everything and has to be supported.”

      This does not mean, however, that the painter had been pushed to the margins of society, not even after both Titus and Stoffels had died. Emmens's conclusion, mentioned above, that the old Rembrandt was still considered a “towering” figure in his time is supported by several interesting documents. For instance, on December 29, 1667, Rembrandt was visited by Prince Cosimo de' Medici (Cosimo III), the future grand duke of Tuscany. In the prince's travel journal, Rembrandt was referred to as “pittore famoso” (“famous painter”). Only two of the other artists he visited were referred to as “famoso,” Gerrit Dou (Dou, Gerrit) and Frans van Mieris (Mieris, Frans van, The Elder). Cosimo probably bought one of Rembrandt's late self-portraits in the summer of 1669 on a second visit he is thought to have paid to Rembrandt. These visits surely indicate that Rembrandt was esteemed highly until his death. This is confirmed by the discovery among the papers of the southern German art lover Gabriel Bucelinus of a list with the “Names of the Most Distinguished European Painters” in which Rembrandt is mentioned. It is striking not only that Bucelinus recorded his name as a distinguished painter but that Rembrandt is the sole painter in this list of 166 names to whose name he appends the note “nostrae aetatis miraculum” (“miracle of our age”).

      Nevertheless, there is a puzzling discrepancy between such evidence of Rembrandt's fame and the fact that he was never chosen as the first candidate for a prestigious commission. An outstanding example is the case of the mausoleum in Palace Huis ten Bosch in The Hague, to be erected in the Central Hall, known as the Oranjezaal. For this octagonal hall a grand ensemble of paintings was planned depicting the life and triumphs of stadholder Prince Frederik Hendrik, who had died in 1647. The extremely ambitious plans for this hall were developed by Amalia van Solms, his widow; Huygens, his secretary; and the painter and architect Jacob van Campen (Campen, Jacob van). Those considered to be the best painters of that moment from the northern as well as from the southern Netherlands were invited to contribute one or more works to add to this ensemble. Rembrandt was not among these painters; in the extremely well-preserved Oranjezaal there is no work from his hand, although Lievens, the friend of his youth, did contribute a work.

      A similar example is the new Amsterdam Town Hall, now the Royal Palace, which had an extensive decoration program. This would contain a great number of large history pieces painted by different masters. Rembrandt was not invited, but his former pupil Flinck received the most prestigious of these commissions: he was commissioned to paint a series of monumental history pieces in the lunettes of the Central Hall. However, Flinck died before he could finish the first painting of this series. It was only then that Rembrandt was invited, as a stand-in for Flinck, to paint one of these works, the Conspiracy of the Batavians. It seems that the painting ultimately was not accepted.

      The fact that both these projects, the Oranjezaal and the Amsterdam Town Hall, can be termed Classicist in style may explain the absence of Rembrandt's works. Rembrandt did not fit the new fashion and apparently was not willing to adapt his style to these projects. It is true that his huge Conspiracy of the Batavians was mounted for a short time in its place in the Town Hall, but then it was removed. Surviving documents mention that Rembrandt expected payment for changes he was to carry out. However, the painting did not return to its place. At some unknown point, it was cut down, possibly by Rembrandt himself, to a manageable size.

      This may have been one of the situations in which Rembrandt proved to be a headstrong, self-willed man. He may well have gained the reputation of a man not malleable to his patrons' wishes. Baldinucci (Baldinucci, Filippo), on the authority of Rembrandt's Danish pupil Eberhard Keil, makes mention of “Rembrandt's lack of conformity” and points out that “his singularity in his way of painting corresponded to his way of life.” Baldinucci continues, “He was an umorista [capricious man] of the first order and disdained everybody. When he worked he would not receive the greatest monarch in the world; a king would have to return again and again until he finished his work.” These statements may be exaggerated, but other documents confirm that they must contain some truth. Baldinucci further remarks that “Rembrandt associated with people below his station; the artist's ugly and plebeian face was accompanied by dirty and untidy clothes because it was his habit to wipe his brushes on himself while he worked and to do other things of a similar nature.” But one should temper Baldinucci's characterization with the testimonies of Rembrandt's contemporaries, such as Huygens and von Sandrart, from which Rembrandt emerges as a person who was so intensely devoted to his work that he neglected everything that would interfere with it, including many social niceties.

 Nevertheless, the old Rembrandt still received commissions, mainly for portraits, among which a group portrait of the sampling officials of the Amsterdam Drapers' Guild (The Syndics of the Amsterdam Drapers' Guild, 1662), an anonymous family group (mid-1660s), and an anonymous Portrait historié as Isaac and Rebecca (1667), better known as The Jewish Bride (portrait historié is a phrase used to indicate a portrait in which the sitter is—or in this case the sitters are—rendered in a historic role with historicizing costumes). Shortly before his death Rembrandt was preparing a number of copperplates for an etched Passion, commissioned by the Amsterdam art lover Dirck Cattenburgh (1616–1704). He did not finish this project.

      Rembrandt died at age 63 and was buried in the Westerkerk in Amsterdam. The cause of his death is not known.

Assessment

Rembrandt's legacy
      Rembrandt is renowned for his outstanding ability to render the human figure and its emotions. He also was unusually gifted as an artist; the way in which he handled his pen or chalk, the etching needle, or the brush betrays a great sensitivity and spontaneity, and the resulting works convey a sense of freedom and creativity. Rembrandt thought about and experimented with purely pictorial matters—the possibilities of composition; the role of tone and colour in the creation of pictorial space, light, shadow, and reflection; and how to vary the properties of his paint to obtain specific effects—with sharp intelligence and originality.

      Another aspect of Rembrandt's genius is the acute and loving attention with which he observed the world around him. In his renderings of women and children and of animals and landscapes, he showed a strong understanding of the significant detail, but he noted these impressions with extraordinary freedom and economy. This dual quality made him exemplary for later artists and, in some ways, one of the first “modern” artists.

      Rembrandt was an innovator in technique in all three of his media. From his early, colourful history paintings to his glowing late works, it is clear that he was an artist continuously in search of new stylistic modes of expression and that he belongs to that small category of artists whose development never ceased. Rembrandt's evolution culminated in his remarkable late style, usually considered to be the summit of his art. In this sense he may be compared with painters such as Titian and Goya (Goya, Francisco de) or composers such as Beethoven (Beethoven, Ludwig van) and Verdi (Verdi, Giuseppe).

Research and attribution
      Paradoxically, Rembrandt's continually changing style, which seems so personal, was faithfully imitated by his pupils in each of its phases. This accorded with the common workshop practice of his time. However, since so many young artists wished to be trained in Rembrandt's workshop, this training practice—in which his pupils produced marketable paintings and etchings in Rembrandt's style—subsequently caused much confusion (still unresolved) over the authenticity of many of the works that were traditionally attributed to Rembrandt.

      The Rembrandt Research Project has extensively researched the authenticity of paintings attributed to Rembrandt (see Sidebar: Rembrandt Research Project). Among those paintings that have survived to be investigated, however, many have suffered the ravages of time. Some have darkened over time, others have been changed in format, and still others have been cleaned and restored too drastically. One thing is certain, however: the number of faked (forgery) Rembrandts is negligible because so many school works could easily—often mala fide—be upgraded to “genuine” Rembrandts or were for long not recognized as school works due to their closeness to a (corrupted) image of Rembrandt's personal style.

      Many of the same attribution problems that apply to Rembrandt's paintings continue to challenge scholars studying his drawings. Adding to this challenge is the fact that many of his drawings have been lost.

      Authenticity issues regarding Rembrandt's etchings have also arisen, albeit to a lesser degree than with the paintings and drawings. The posthumous impressions from Rembrandt's copperplates that continued to be printed until well into the 19th century and the production of photographically generated facsimiles have all caused, and still cause, much confusion. Scholars are aware of about 80 of Rembrandt's etching plates that have been preserved.

      In the past, scholars struggled to find methods that could solve questions concerning attribution and Rembrandt's artistic practices. This struggle came about in part because very few of Rembrandt's works are so conclusively documented that there can be no doubt as to their authenticity. Consequently, the foundation on which to reconstruct his oeuvre is very narrow. At the same time, written statements by Rembrandt on artistically and biographically relevant issues are extremely rare. Only a few (business) letters from his own hand have survived, and they rarely bear on artistic matters. Because of this scarcity of contemporary evidence, scholars long felt constrained to speculate on issues of authenticity.

      Rembrandt research took a step forward in the later decades of the 20th century, when works by Rembrandt and his school began to be investigated as material objects subject to scientific methods of inquiry. These investigations provided information about the artist's technique and, indirectly, his ideas on art and teaching. In correlating this information with relevant contemporary treatises on art (especially the book on the art of painting by Rembrandt's former pupil van Hoogstraten, published in 1678), it has been possible to reconstruct aspects of the contemporary art-theoretical background and terminology that would have shaped Rembrandt's ideas and practices. A great quantity of notary reports and other documents on legal, financial, and family affairs have come to light and are still being discovered, while a growing amount of recovered archival material sheds light on early owners of Rembrandt's works. As a result, Rembrandt studies continued to evolve into the 21st century. The results of such studies will always leave room for new interpretations as historical perspectives continue to change.

Ernst van de Wetering

Additional Reading

Rembrandt's life
J.J. Orlers, Beschrijvinge der stadt Leyden, 2nd ed. (1641), p. 375, is the earliest biography; Arnold Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vol. (1753, revised in 1 vol., 1976), vol. 1, pp. 254–273, is a long biography (containing many spurious anecdotes) that became the basis of the image of Rembrandt that prevailed in the 18th and 19th centuries. A publication that examines the view of Rembrandt in this era is Alison McQueen, The Rise of the Cult of Rembrandt: Reinventing an Old Master in Nineteenth-Century France (2003). Texts from Rembrandt's hand are discussed in Horst Gerson, Seven Letters by Rembrandt, trans. by Yda D. Ovink (1961). Contemporary documents concerning Rembrandt are compiled in C. Hofstede de Groot, Die Urkunden über Rembrandt (1575–1721) (1906); and in Walter L. Strauss and Marion van der Meulen (compilers), The Rembrandt Documents (1979).Gary Schwartz, Rembrandt: His Life, His Paintings (1985, reissued 1991; originally published in Dutch, 1984); and Mariët Westermann, Rembrandt (2000), provide a general introduction. Simon Schama, Rembrandt's Eyes (1999), is a full-length biographical treatment.Michael Zell, Reframing Rembrandt: Jews and the Christian Image in Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam (2002); and Amy Golahny, Rembrandt's Reading: The Artist's Bookshelf of Ancient Poetry and History (2003), discuss Rembrandt's intellectual and religious context.Useful biographical essays include A.Th. van Deursen, “Rembrandt and His Age: The Life of an Amsterdam Burgher,” pp. 44–49; and S.A.C. Dudok van Heel, “The Changing Portrait of the Artist,” pp. 50–67, both in Sally Salvesen (ed.), Rembrandt: The Master and His Workshop, exhib. cat. (1991). Also noteworthy are M. Blokhuis, “On the Life of Rembrandt van Rijn 1606–1669,” in Albert Blankert (ed.), Rembrandt: A Genius and His Impact (1997), pp. 22–31; S.A.C. Dudok van Heel, “Rembrandt: His Life, His Wife, the Nursemaid, and the Servant,” in Julia Lloyd Williams (ed.), Rembrandt's Women, exhib. cat. (2001), pp. 19–27; and Ernst van de Wetering and Bernhard Schnackenburg, “Rembrandt's Beginnings,” in The Mystery of the Young Rembrandt, exhib. cat. (2001), pp. 22–57.

Rembrandt's art
Early commentaries on Rembrandt's art can be found in Constantijn Huygens's autobiography of his youth (c. 1630), as well as in writings by Joachim von Sandrart (1675), Samuel van Hoogstraten (1678), Andries Pels (1681), Filippo Baldinucci (1686), and Gérard de Lairesse (1707), which are reproduced and discussed in Seymour Slive, Rembrandt and His Critics, 1630–1730 (1953).Rembrandt's ideas on art and contemporary reflections on these ideas are examined in J.A. Emmens, Rembrandt en de regels van de kunst, vol. 10 in Orbis artium (1968), reissued as vol. 2 of Verzameld werk, 4 vol. (1979), a work that puts into perspective the image of Rembrandt that was created by the 17th-century Classicistic critics and that continued to influence scholarship well into the 20th century, with a summary in English. Sources that discuss Rembrandt and the earlier tradition include Kenneth Clark, Rembrandt and the Italian Renaissance (1966); and B.P.J. Broos, Index in the Formal Sources of Rembrandt's Art (1997).Individual works and particular subjects are discussed in E. Haverkamp-Begemann, Rembrandt, the Nightwatch (1982); Cynthia Schneider, Rembrandt's Landscapes: Drawings and Prints (1990); Ann Jensen Adams (ed.), Rembrandt's Bathsheba Reading King David's Letter (1998); Christopher White and Quentin Buvelot (eds.), Rembrandt by Himself, exhib. cat. (1999); and Julia Lloyd Williams (ed.), Rembrandt's Women, exhib. cat. (2001).

Otto Benesch, The Drawings of Rembrandt: A Critical and Chronological Catalogue, ed. by Eva Benesch, enlarged ed., 6 vol. (1973); Peter Schatborn, Drawings by Rembrandt, His Anonymous Pupils, and Followers (1985), vol. 4 of Catalogue of the Dutch and Flemish Drawings in the Rijksprentenkabinet, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam; and Martin Royalton-Kisch, Drawings by Rembrandt and His Circle in the British Museum, exhib. cat. (1992), discuss Rembrandt as a draftsman.

Writings that discuss Rembrandt's etchings include Edme-François Gersaint, A Catalogue and Description of the Etchings of Rembrandt Van-Rhyn, with Some Account of His Life; To Which Is Added a List of the Best Pieces of This Master for the Use of Those Who Would Make a Select Collection of His Works (1752); Adam Bartsch, Catalogue raisonné de toutes les estampes qui forment l'oeuvre de Rembrandt, et ceux de ses principaux imitateurs, compose par Gersaint, Helle, Glomy, et P. Hyver, 2 vol. (1797); Karel Boon and Christopher White, Rembrandt's Etchings: A New Critical Catalogue (1969); George Biörklund, Rembrandt's Etching, True and False, 2nd ed. rev. and enlarged (1968, reprinted 1988); Holm Bevers, Peter Schatborn, and Barbara Welzel, Rembrandt, The Master & His Workshop: Drawings and Etchings (1991); Erik Hinterding, “The History of Rembrandt's Copperplates, with a Catalogue of Those That Survive,” Simiolus 22(4):253–315 (1993–94); Gary Schwartz (ed.), Rembrandt: All the Etchings Reproduced in True Size (1977, reissued with corrections as The Complete Etchings of Rembrandt: Reproduced in Original Size, 1994); Christiaan Schuckman, Martin Royalton-Kisch, and Erik Hinterding, Rembrandt & Van Vliet: A Collaboration on Copper, exhib. cat. (1996); Christopher White, Rembrandt as an Etcher: A Study of the Artist at Work (1969, reissued 1999); and Erik Hinterding, Ger Luyten, and Martin Royalton-Kisch, Rembrandt the Printmaker, exhib. cat. (2000).

Rembrandt's painting technique is the subject of David Bomford, Christopher Brown, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Rembrandt (1988); Ernst van de Wetering, Rembrandt: The Painter at Work (1997, reissued 2000); and Karin Groen, “An Investigation of the Use of Binding Medium by Rembrandt: Chemical Analyses and Rheology,” Zeitschrift für Kunsttechnologie und Konservierung 11:207–227 (1997).

The artist in context
Much has been written about Rembrandt's workshop and his contemporaries. Astrid Tümpel and Peter Schatborn, Pieter Lastman: The Man Who Taught Rembrandt, exhib. cat. (1991), treats one of Rembrandt's early teachers. The role of Rembrandt's workshop is considered in Ernst van de Wetering, “Problems of Apprenticeship and Studio Collaboration” and “Studio Practice and Studio Production,” in J. Bruyn et al., A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings, vol. 2 (1986), pp. 45–90, and vol. 3 (1989), pp. 12–50; and Walter Liedtke, “Reconstructing Rembrandt and His Circle: More on the Workshop Hypothesis,” in Roland E. Fleischer and Susan Clare Scott (eds.), Rembrandt, Rubens, and the Art of Their Time: Recent Perspectives (1997), in the series Papers in Art History from the Pennsylvania State University, 11:37–59. Werner Sumowski, Drawings of the Rembrandt School, ed. and trans. by Walter L. Strauss (1979–92), and Gemälde der Rembrandt-Schüler in vier Bänden, 6 vol. (1983), analyze the drawings and paintings of the Rembrandt school.Christian Tümpel with Astrid Tümpel, Rembrandt (1986); and Clifford S. Ackley et al., “Rembrandt as Actor and Dramatist: Gesture and Body Language in the Biblical Etchings,” in Rembrandt's Journey: Painter, Draftsman, Etcher, exhib. cat. (2003), pp. 17–28, discuss Rembrandt as a history painter and narrator.

Sources dealing with the authentication of Rembrandt's work include J. Bruyn et al., A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings, vol. 1–3 (1982–89); Ernst van de Wetering et al., A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings, vol. 4 (2005); Walter Liedtke et al., Rembrandt/Not Rembrandt in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2 vol. (1995); Ernst van de Wetering, “Thirty Years of the Rembrandt Research Project: The Tension Between Science and Connoisseurship in Authenticating Art,” in IFAR [International Foundation for Art Research] Journal, 2:14–24; Ernst van de Wetering, “Delimiting Rembrandt's Autograph Œuvre: An Insoluble Problem?,” in The Mystery of the Young Rembrandt, exhib. cat. (2001); and Catherine B. Scallen, Rembrandt, Reputation, and the Practice of Connoisseurship (2004).Ernst van de Wetering

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