The Estate of Prof. Victor Deutsch, Part III and Other Estates

The Angel Appearing to the Shepherds By H. Van Rijn Rembrandt 1606-1669

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Description
Signed and dated 1634 in the plate (lower right)

Technique
Etching, drypoint, and engraving

Date Created
1634

Dimensions
26.2 x 21.8 cm

Literature
Bartsch-Hollstein 44; Hind 120; Bjorklund-Barnard 34-J

Condition
Good, has been professionally cleaned by Noa Cahaner-McManus.

Biography
b. Leiden, 15 July 1606; d. Amsterdam, 4 Oct 1669, bur 8 Oct 1669. Dutch painter, draughtsman and etcher. From 1632 onwards he signed his works with only the forename Rembrandt; in documents, however, he continued to sign Rembrandt van Rijn (occasionally van Rhyn), initially with the addition of the patronymic Harmensz.. This was no doubt in imitation of the great Italians such as Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael and Titian, on whom he modelled himself, sometimes literally. He certainly equalled them in fame, and not only in his own country. His name still symbolizes a whole period of art history rightfully known as Hollands Golden Age. In 197071 a great exhibition in Paris was devoted to it under the eloquent title Le Sicle de Rembrandt. A century before, a popular work of cultural history by C. Busken Huet referred to the Netherlands as the land of Rembrandt. His fame is partly due to his multi-faceted talent. Frans Hals was perhaps at times a greater virtuoso with the brush but remained only a portrait painter. Vermeer may have excelled Rembrandt in the art of illusion but was less prolific. Rembrandt was not only a gifted painter but also an inspired graphic artist: he has probably never been surpassed as an etcher, and he often seems inimitable as a draughtsman. His subjects reflect his manifold talent and interests. He painted, drew and etched portraits, landscapes, figures and animals, but, above all, scenes of biblical and secular history and mythology. Contemporary critics ascribed the highest artistic value to his history paintings, as opposed to his portraits, which were regarded as a necessary evil. Rembrandt combined theory and practice, inventing, for instance, a new kind of painting, the tronie or portrait head (see I, 2(i) below), a compromise between portraiture and history painting. His most famous portrait commission was that of the Militia Company of Capt. Frans Banning Cocq and Lt Willem van Ruytenburch, a picture known by its nickname, the Night Watch (1642; Amsterdam, Rijksmus.; see AMSTERDAM, fig. 4); it was praised in 1678 by Samuel van Hoogstraten on the grounds that the artist had made it into a history instead of a mere group portrait. In 1641, the year before it was completed, J. J. Orlers, the artists first biographer, described Rembrandt as one of the most famous painters of our age. (The Grove Dictionary of Art).