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Rembrandt and workshop. Companion piece to 132b Portrait of Petronella Buys: 1635: Oil on panel: 78.8 x 65.3: Leiden Collection, New York: 132b: Rembrandt and workshop. Companion piece to 132a Portrait of a Man in a Slouched Hat and Bandoleer: 1635: Oil on canvas: 78.5 x 65.7: Kawamura Memorial DIC Museum of Art, Sakura: 133a: Rembrandt and/or ...
Rembrandt's teachers in Leiden were Jacob van Swanenburgh [note 1] (from 1621 to 1623, [5] with whom he learned pen drawing [6]) and Joris van Schooten. [note 2] [7]However, his six-month stay in Amsterdam in 1624, with Pieter Lastman and Jan Pynasc, was decisive in his training: Rembrandt learned pencil drawing, the principles of composition, and working from nature. [6]
The dozens of self-portraits by Rembrandt were an important part of his oeuvre. Rembrandt created approaching one hundred self-portraits including over forty paintings, thirty-one etchings and about seven drawings; some remain uncertain as to the identity of either the subject (mostly etchings) or the artist (mostly paintings), or the ...
The monochromatic painting, which measures 9.6 x 7.3 inches, was purchased by an anonymous buyer for €860,000 (then around $910,000) at the Christie’s sale — more than 50 times the painting ...
A beggar in a tall hat and long cloak, with a cottage and two figures in the background: About 1629 or earlier B012: 1: Self portrait in a fur cap, in an oval border: About 1629 B095: 1: Peter and John at the gate of the Temple: roughly etched: About 1629 B106: 1: St. Jerome kneeling: a large plate: About 1629 B115: 1: The small lion hunt: with ...
Inscribed Rembrandt f. Two Butchers at Work: 1635: Pen and bistre: 14.9 x 20 cm: Städel, Frankfurt am Main: Inscribed t vel daer aen ende voorts de rest bysleepende The Angel Preventing Abraham from Sacrificing his Son, Isaac: 1635: Red chalk over black chalk, with grey wash, on paper prepared with light brown wash: 19.5 x 14.7 cm: British ...
Baldwin, Robert (1985), '"On earth we are beggars, as Christ himself was": The Protestant Background to Rembrandt's Imagery of Poverty, Begging, and Sickness,'. Konsthistorisk Tidskrift (LIV) 3: 122–135; Baldwin, Robert (1989), 'Rembrandt's New Testament Prints: Artistic Genius, Social Anxiety, and the Calvinist Marketed Image,'.
Rembrandt. Self Portrait, c. 1655. Oil on panel, 48.9 x 40.2 cm. Kunsthistorisches Museum. Self Portrait (or The Large Self-Portrait) [1] is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Dutch artist Rembrandt. Painted in 1652, it is one of more than 40 painted self-portraits by Rembrandt, and was the first he had painted since 1645. [2]