Rembrandt van Rijn - a Hurdy-gurdy player (The Schoolmaster) etching for sale buy ets te koop 2
Rembrandt van Rijn - a Hurdy-gurdy player (The Schoolmaster) framed etching for sale te koop
Rembrandt van Rijn - a Hurdy-gurdy player (The Schoolmaster) etching for sale buy ets te koop
Rembrandt van Rijn - a Hurdy-gurdy player (The Schoolmaster) etching for sale buy ets te koop 2
Rembrandt van Rijn - a Hurdy-gurdy player (The Schoolmaster) framed etching for sale te koop
Rembrandt van Rijn - a Hurdy-gurdy player (The Schoolmaster) etching for sale buy ets te koop
Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn
(Leiden 1606-1669 Amsterdam)

“A Hurdy-Gurdy player followed by children at the door of a house (The Schoolmaster)”, 1641

etching 93 x 61 mm

with small margins;

signed and dated on the door-hatch: Rembrandt f 1641

watermark: Arms of Amsterdam.

Notes

As one of the towering figures in the history of art, Rembrandt, a miller’s son from the university town of Leiden, was an artist of unmatched genius. Equally gifted as a painter, printmaker, and draftsman, Rembrandt proved himself to be as skillful at making portraits as he was at creating religious and mythological narratives. His landscapes are just as remarkable as his rare still lifes and subjects detailing everyday life.

Widely recognized as the greatest practitioner of the etching technique in the history of art, Rembrandt created 300 prints that constitute a body of work unparalleled in richness and beauty. During his lifetime, Rembrandt’s extraordinary skills as a printmaker were the main source of his international fame. Unlike his oil paintings, prints travelled light and were relatively cheap. For this reason, they soon became very popular with collectors not only within, but also beyond the borders of the Netherlands.

Provenance

  • private collection, Germany;
  • with Douwes Fine Art, exhibited at the 200 year jubilee exhibition of 2006, in cat, p. 111 with ill.;
  • private collection, The Netherlands.

Literature

Bartsch 128; Seidlitz 128; Hind 192; White-Boon 128,  only state.

‘The New Hollstein, 2013, no. 191, 1st state (of IV)

Plate in existence – Nowell-Usticke (1967): C2+

 

Choose your language