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Rembrandt van Rijn etching for sale ets te koop - Self-Portrait in a Cap and Scarf with the Face Dark Bust 1
Rembrandt van Rijn etching for sale ets te koop - Self-Portrait in a Cap and Scarf with the Face Dark Bust (frame)
Rembrandt van Rijn etching for sale ets te koop - Self-Portrait in a Cap and Scarf with the Face Dark Bust 2
Rembrandt van Rijn etching for sale ets te koop - Self-Portrait in a Cap and Scarf with the Face Dark Bust 1
Rembrandt van Rijn etching for sale ets te koop - Self-Portrait in a Cap and Scarf with the Face Dark Bust (frame)
Rembrandt van Rijn etching for sale ets te koop - Self-Portrait in a Cap and Scarf with the Face Dark Bust 2
Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn
(Leiden 1606-1669 Amsterdam)

“Self-Portrait in a Cap and Scarf with the Face Dark: Bust”, 1633

Etching: 16 x 13,1 cm

signed and dated lower centre: ‘Rembrandt | f. 1633’

 

Notes

This work dates from 1633 when Rembrandt was in his mid-to-late 20s; he had recently moved from his native Leiden to Amsterdam and was famous and successful. To some extent this work reflects his status, showing him wearing a cap and scarf, facing one way but looking in the other. It is a fine example of Rembrandt’s interest in chiaroscuro etching – with detailed passages coupled with extreme bare space. Areas like the left shoulder, cheek bone and right pupil demonstrate areas of bare ‘highlight’ etching. These sections are in brilliant contrast to the diligently detailed areas of Rembrandt’s hair, lower torso and face. Thus his self-portraits were a means for Rembrandt to explore his experimental technique, indulge his curious nature and reveal his personality.

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.

Rembrandt’s etchings are remarkable for their high number of self-portraits (over 30 out of about 300). These are particularly collectible, perhaps due to the smaller number of states as well as the artist’s compelling and powerful presence. Unlike his stately religious scenes, or regal posed portraits of others, which exhibit his careful and calculating brilliance as an etcher, Rembrandt’s self-portraits reveal him as an artist and a man. In them he assumes the role of the experimenting artist, approaching the most difficult of subjects – himself.

 

Provenance

  • Important private collection, USA
  • Sotheby’s London
  • Private collection, The Netherlands

Literature

Bartsch 17; Hind 108;

The New Hollstein Dutch 120: second state (of V),

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

Condition

A rich, dark impression of New Hollstein’s second state (of five), with wide margins, the image in great condition.

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