Rembrandt van Rijn etching print for sale ets te koop gravure a vendre The Fourth Oriental Head, 1635
Rembrandt van Rijn etching print for sale ets te koop gravure a vendre The Fourth Oriental Head, 1635 framed
Rembrandt van Rijn etching print for sale ets te koop gravure a vendre The Fourth Oriental Head, 1635 f
Rembrandt van Rijn etching print for sale ets te koop gravure a vendre The Fourth Oriental Head, 1635
Rembrandt van Rijn etching print for sale ets te koop gravure a vendre The Fourth Oriental Head, 1635 framed
Rembrandt van Rijn etching print for sale ets te koop gravure a vendre The Fourth Oriental Head, 1635 f
Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn
(Leiden 1606-1669 Amsterdam)

“The Fourth Oriental Head”, 1635

Etching and drypoint: 15,3 x 13,1 mm;

Signed centre left: Rt

trimmed into the subject on all sides, on laid paper,

watermark Foolscap with five-pointed Collar

(see Hinterding K.a, circa 1635)

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.

This print is part of a set of four, traditionally referred to as the Oriental Heads. They are free copies after prints by Rembrandt’s major contemporary, Jan Lievens, who shared a studio with him in their native Leiden between 1626 and 1631, when they were both young artists on the rise and before their move to Amsterdam. Our etching is based on Lievens’s Bust of a young man, facing right (Hollstein Dutch, XI, p. 42, no. 44).

The Oriental Heads  are fine examples of tronies, the Dutch word at the time for a face. Typically these are heads or busts only, concentrating on the facial expression, but often half-length when featured in an exotic costume. Tronies might be based on studies from life or use the features of actual sitters. Both paintings and prints of this kind were sold on the art market without identification of the sitter, and were not commissioned and retained by the sitter as portraits normally were. Rembrandt’s tronies were among his most popular and widely imitated prints.

Literature

Bartsch 289; The New Hollstein Dutch (NHD) 152, third state (of VI):

Plate not in existence. With Nowell & Usticke as R+a scarce and desirable portrait

Provenance:

  • John Barnard (d. 1784), London (Lugt 1420);
  • his sale, Thomas Philipe, London, 16 April 1798 (and following days), probably lot 350 (‘Three oriental heads – all very fine – the third extremely scarce’) (£ 2-13; to Philipe).
  • With Thomas Philipe, London.
  • With Colnaghi & Co., London (their stocknumber C 17807 in pencil verso).
  • Christie’s London
  • Douwes Fine Art, Amsterdam
  • Private collection, The Netherlands

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