Rembrandt's Prints
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Dutch Golden Age painter Dutch Golden Age painting is the painting of the Dutch Golden Age, a period in Dutch history roughly spanning the 17th century, during and after the later part of the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648) for Dutch independence. The new Dutch Republi ...
Rembrandt Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (; ; 15 July 1606 – 4 October 1669), mononymously known as Rembrandt was a Dutch Golden Age painter, printmaker, and Drawing, draughtsman. He is generally considered one of the greatest visual artists in ...
was a prolific
printmaker Printmaking is the process of creating artworks by printing, normally on paper, but also on fabric, wood, metal, and other surfaces. "Traditional printmaking" normally covers only the process of creating prints using a hand processed technique ...
throughout his career, and is universally regarded as one of the greatest creators of
old master print An old master print (also spaced masterprint) is a work of art produced by a printing process within the Western tradition (mostly by Old Masters). The term remains current in the art trade, and there is no easy alternative in English to distingu ...
s. Though, like other prints, his are often loosely described as "
engraving Engraving is the practice of incising a design on a hard, usually flat surface by cutting grooves into it with a Burin (engraving), burin. The result may be a decorated object in itself, as when silver, gold, steel, or Glass engraving, glass ar ...
s", the main technique he used was
etching Etching is traditionally the process of using strong acid or mordant to cut into the unprotected parts of a metal surface to create a design in intaglio (incised) in the metal. In modern manufacturing, other chemicals may be used on other type ...
, with some prints entirely in true engraving or in
drypoint Drypoint is a printmaking technique of the intaglio (printmaking), intaglio family, in which an image is incised into a plate (or "matrix") with a hard-pointed "needle" of sharp metal or diamond point. In principle, the method is practically iden ...
. Many prints used a mixture of techniques, as was common at the time. In all he produced about 300 prints. He is famous for revising prints, sometimes over a period of several years, producing an unusually large number of
states State most commonly refers to: * State (polity), a centralized political organization that regulates law and society within a territory **Sovereign state, a sovereign polity in international law, commonly referred to as a country **Nation state, a ...
, which have provided specialist scholars with a good deal of work. For some of his career Rembrandt had an etching press in his house; this is now recreated in the original room in the
Rembrandt House Museum The Rembrandt House Museum () is a museum located in a former house in the Jodenbreestraat, in the center of Amsterdam. Between 1639 and 1658, the house was occupied by the Dutch painter Rembrandt van Rijn, who also had his studio and art dealer ...
in Amsterdam. He produced prints on a wide range of subjects: self-portraits and portraits, biblical and mythological subjects, genre scenes, landscapes, and other subjects. In particular, of the unprecedentedly high number of
self-portraits by Rembrandt 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 t ...
, 31 are etchings, ranging from very quick sketches to four highly-finished "official" self-portraits. Unlike his paintings, his prints circulated throughout Europe during his lifetime, contributing to his great reputation. Some of his prints survive in a single impression (or copy), but these are mostly sketchy studies. Many of his most finished prints have had the plates reworked, initially by Rembrandt himself, to produce a later state, but then by others for two centuries or more after his death. Studies of the paper used, and any
watermark A watermark is an identifying image or pattern in paper that appears as various shades of lightness/darkness when viewed by transmitted light (or when viewed by reflected light, atop a dark background), caused by thickness or density variations i ...
s, help to clarify the dating of what are often several stages of creating the print, and then printing off batches of it.


Overview

Trained by Joris van Schooten in Leiden and by
Pieter Lastman Pieter Lastman (1583–1633) was a Dutch painter. Lastman is considered important because of his work as a painter of history pieces and because his pupils included Rembrandt and Jan Lievens. In his paintings Lastman paid careful attention to ...
, Rembrandt quickly incorporated
chiaroscuro In art, chiaroscuro ( , ; ) is the use of strong contrasts between light and dark, usually bold contrasts affecting a whole composition. It is also a technical term used by artists and art historians for the use of contrasts of light to ach ...
into his
etchings Etching is traditionally the process of using strong acid or mordant to cut into the unprotected parts of a metal surface to create a design in Intaglio (printmaking), intaglio (incised) in the metal. In modern manufacturing, other chemicals may ...
. Initially, Rembrandt produced a large number of reproductive or commercial prints. He began etching around 1625, at the same time as launching his career as an independent painter. Initially very close to the style of
Jan Lievens Jan Lievens (24 October 1607 – 4 June 1674) was a Dutch Golden Age painter who was associated with his close contemporary Rembrandt, a year older, in the early parts of their careers. They shared a birthplace in Leiden, training with Pieter ...
, with whom he shared his studio, Rembrandt left the sculptural effects to work more on faces and the play of light – a characteristic he would develop throughout his career. Living in Amsterdam since 1630, Rembrandt sought to break into the art market by innovating both in subject and technique, producing compositions captured on the spot of great quality. From 1636 onwards, Rembrandt distinguished himself by his mature treatment of self-portraits, a more humanistic representation of biblical subjects, and his growing mastery of engraving techniques. Rembrandt found his true style in the less productive 1640s, abandoning a sometimes exaggerated Baroque for a more intimate Classicism, in both religious subjects and landscapes. He also gradually changed his approach to subjects, concentrating on the moment whose dramatic tension comes from putting the action on hold. Initially meticulous in the treatment of textures, Rembrandt concentrated on the structure of objects and lighting effects, the apogee in terms of composition and technique being the ''
Hundred Guilder Print The ''Hundred Guilder Print'' is an etching with drypoint by Rembrandt, measuring 278 x 388 mm (platemark). The etching's popular name derives from the large sum of money supposedly charged for it. It is also called ''Christ healing the sick'', ...
'' (completed in 1649, after a decade of work). In the 1650s, Rembrandt became more productive and artistically liberated.
"But what set this artist apart was a way he invented for making engravings. This one, entirely his own, was never used by others nor seen since and consisted of strokes of points of different strengths, with irregular, isolated strokes, which created a deep chiaroscuro of great intensity. And in truth, in a certain kind of engraving, Rembrandt was much more esteemed by professionals than in painting, in which he seems to have had exceptional luck more than merit of his own." - Philippe Baldinucci, art historian and contemporary collector of Rembrandt, 1681-1728. “In the history of graphic art, it rarely happens that a technique can be completely identified with the genius of a single artist; however, it can be said that etching, in the seventeenth century, is Rembrandt.” - Karel G. Boon, Director of the Prints and Drawings Department, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, 1963


Rembrandt and engraving


The years 1626–1640


Training in Leiden and Amsterdam

Rembrandt's teachers in Leiden were
Jacob van Swanenburgh Jacob Isaacszoon van Swanenburg (; 1571 in Leiden – 1638 in Utrecht) was a Dutch painter, draftsman and art dealer. He was known for his city views, history paintings, Christian religious scenes and portraits. He spent a substantial part o ...
Karel G. Boon describes Swanenburgh as a "fairly insignificant painter of architecture, a retarded disciple of Mannerism". While it is known that Rembrandt perfected his pen-and-ink drawing skills with him at the age of 15, "it is not known what influence Jacob Izaaksz Swanenburch had on his young pupil". (from 1621 to 1623, with whom he learned pen drawing) and Joris van Schooten.It was at Joris van Schooten's that Rembrandt is said to have met Jan Lievens, then considered “more gifted than he”. However, his six-month stay in Amsterdam in 1624, with
Pieter Lastman Pieter Lastman (1583–1633) was a Dutch painter. Lastman is considered important because of his work as a painter of history pieces and because his pupils included Rembrandt and Jan Lievens. In his paintings Lastman paid careful attention to ...
and Jan Pynasc, was decisive in his training: Rembrandt learned pencil drawing, the principles of composition, and working from nature. He mainly tackled the same biblical and antique themes as Lastman, treating them with the same “narrative power and remarkable realistic accents”. Lastman also passed on to him the influence of artists he had met in Rome:
Adam Elsheimer Adam Elsheimer (18 March 1578 – 11 December 1610) was a German artist working in Rome, who died at only thirty-two, but was very influential in the early 17th century in the field of Baroque paintings. His relatively few paintings were sma ...
and
Caravaggio Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (also Michele Angelo Merigi or Amerighi da Caravaggio; 29 September 1571 – 18 July 1610), known mononymously as Caravaggio, was an Italian painter active in Rome for most of his artistic life. During the fina ...
, while he discovered the work of Rubens in his studio. Rembrandt thus appropriated chiaroscuro as his language, “of rare poetry”. The bustle and art of Amsterdam left their mark on his early work; he became acquainted with Flemish painters, including Hercule Seghers. Rembrandt did not go on the Grand Tour and settled in Leiden in 1625. His friend Jan Lievens, also a pupil of Lastman and van Schooten, joined his studio. By this time, their talent and style were so similar that it was difficult for art historians to distinguish between them.Even if the writer Constantin Huygens, no specialist on the subject, wrote in 1629-1631 that “Rembrandt was incomparable in the narrative life he knew how to lend to his subjects”. André-Charles Coppier speaks of a time when Rembrandt's production was limited to an overproduction of commercially-oriented prints – “sales subjects” for which he was content with a purely linear style – associated with the painters Jan Lievens,
Gerrit Dou Gerrit Dou (; 7 April 1613 – 9 February 1675), also known as Gerard Douw or Dow, was a Dutch Golden Age painter, whose small, highly polished paintings are typical of the Leiden fijnschilders. He specialised in genre scenes and is noted for h ...
, Hendrick Cornelisz. van Vliet and
Jacques des Rousseaux Jacques des Rousseaux (1600 – 1638), was a Baroque painter active in Leiden. He was born in Torcoing, which at the time was part of the Spanish Netherlands. Biography According to the RKD he was a pupil of Rembrandt in Leiden from 1630 onw ...
. Personal style and etching debut Rembrandt's works become more intimate and “reveal a new subtlety in the treatment of chiaroscuro” (B. 88, B. 51). He soon found a very free and personal style for self-portraits and visages.See the small studies of elderly people for whom his parents were most often the models: B. 374 and B. 366. He seems to have started etching as early as 1625–26 – at the very beginning of his career as an independent painter – although his first engravings are dated 1628. His technique and style are very close to those of Lievens, who probably instructed him. Rembrandt, however, left sculptural effects to study light effects in particular. He perceived engraving as an experimental and foreign art form: at first, he was content to draw ( B. 59, S. 398). His style evolved, as he became more airy and chose larger compositions, although he still produced small, detailed scenes ( B. 48, B. 66). We know that Rembrandt owned a collection of Callot's engravings and that he was strongly inspired by the Gueux series ( B. 173, B. 16). However, he followed the typical themes of his time in both painting and engraving, with biblical subjects, old men's heads, and self-portraits.


Installation in Amsterdam

Rembrandt moved to Amsterdam in 1631 and opened his studio in the home of his friend, the publisher and art dealer
Hendrick van Uylenburgh Hendrick Gerritszoon van Uylenburgh (c. 1587 – 1661) was an influential Dutch Golden Age art dealer who helped launch the careers of Rembrandt, Govert Flinck, Ferdinand Bol and other painters. Biography Van Uylenburgh came from a Frisian ...
. He married the latter's niece, Saskia, who had a social network in the local bourgeoisie from which he benefited. He achieved his first success with the painting ''The Anatomy Lesson of Doctor Tulp'' (1632). From 1631 to 1634, Rembrandt painted several self-portraits that were close to the Baroque codes of his painting style at the time ( B. 7, B. 23). On the strength of this success, Rembrandt sought to establish himself on the art market, which was dominated by Rubens. He tried to transcribe the imagination he had shown in his paintings in his etchings, where he studied how to reproduce the effects of grisaille painting ( B. 73, B. 81, B. 90, B. 77), without success until the ''Annunciation to the shepherds'' ( B. 44). He did, however, manage to capture reality on the spot with great quality: ''Grande mariée juive'' (B. 340) and ''Faiseuse de koucks'' ( B. 124), which "are two masterpieces in their genres". He collected numerous works of art – notably by
Annibale Carracci Annibale Carracci ( , , ; November 3, 1560 – July 15, 1609) was an Italian painter and instructor, active in Bologna and later in Rome. Along with his brother Agostino Carracci, Agostino and cousin Ludovico Carracci, Ludovico (with whom the Ca ...
and
Antonio Tempesta Antonio Tempesta, also called il Tempestino (1555 – 5 August 1630), was an Italian painter and engraver, whose art acted as a point of connection between Roman Baroque, Baroque Rome and the culture of Antwerp. Much of his work depicts major ba ...
– which never failed to inspire him, as can be seen in ''Sainte Famille'' ( B. 62) and ''Joseph et la femme de Putiphar'' ( B. 39). 1636 was a pivotal year for Rembrandt: he achieved greater maturity in his treatment of self-portraits ( B. 21), and opted for a humanist – albeit more classical – representation of biblical subjects ( B. 91, B. 28), while at the same time displaying a heightened dramatic and baroque expression. Rembrandt also became more aware of the technical means of engraving: he made more precipitate and syncopated cuts in some ( B. 91). Still, he was much more tender and nuanced in others, as in his studies of Saskia ( B. 365, B. 367, B. 342) or in ''Jeune couple et la mort'' ( B. 109). He began to exploit Drypoint with an early success, ''Death of the Virgin'' ( B. 99), but did not use both on the same plate until 1641–1642.


The 1640s–1650s

In 1639, Rembrandt discovered
Raphael Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino (; March 28 or April 6, 1483April 6, 1520), now generally known in English as Raphael ( , ), was an Italian painter and architect of the High Renaissance. List of paintings by Raphael, His work is admired for its cl ...
's ''
Portrait of Baldassare Castiglione ''Portrait of Baldassare Castiglione'' is a c. 1514–1515 oil painting attributed to the Italian High Renaissance painter Raphael. Considered one of the great portraits of the Renaissance, it has an enduring influence. It depicts Raphael's frien ...
'', a revelation that had "a great aesthetic impact" on him. The union of technique, style and poetry that was to become his style was born in the 1640s. He abandoned the exuberance of the Baroque for a more classical expression; early specialists attributed this shift towards introspection, intimacy, and a return to a more religious content - he intensified the luminous effects - in his biblical scenes to the dramas experienced by the artist at the time (Saskia died in 1642 and he had serious economic problems), while 20th-century writers put this theory into perspective and are more pragmatic. Rembrandt produced few works between 1642 and 1648, and his problems did not flare up again until 1650, a period of great productivity. At the age of 40, he discovered the work of Leonardo da Vinci and Andrea Mantegna, who had a major influence on his future work, notably on ''The Hundred Guilder Coin'' ( B. 74) and B. 34). Despite his setbacks, Rembrandt evolved through more human experiences and aesthetic concerns in tune with “the general trends of his time”. He thus embarked on a “very thorough and intimate study of landscape”, several years after having tackled the theme in painting. With a “captivating sincerity”, his landscapes benefit from a “suggestive, sparing line” that freshly evokes the details of the vastness of the ''Dutch landscape'' ( B. 228, B. 208). He progressed in this genre thanks to his ability to see his subjects for himself and to “feel” the atmospheric quality of the landscape. The softer chiaroscuro and better integration of the subject into its environment, which would endure throughout his future work, can now be appreciated. He was also interested in “free subjects”, with the pastoral idyll ( B. 187) and pure eroticism, with a couple in a very sensual attitude ( B. 186), but abandoned commissioned portraiture, except his bourgeois clients ( B. 285). His works in this genre benefited from more thoughtful, monumental compositions, abandoning trompe-l'œil effects in his painted and engraved portraits ( B. 278). As in his painting, Rembrandt changed the way he approached his subjects: he no longer depicted the most pathetic moment, but the one "whose dramatic tension comes from putting the action on hold", as in ''The Little Resurrection of Lazarus'' (B. 72) and ''Abraham and Isaac'' ( B. 34). His choice of biblical scenes focused on the most lyrical – see ''L'ange disparaît devant la famille de Tobie'' ( B. 43) – and he also worked more on nocturnal scenes, as in ''Le Maître d'école'' ( B. 128), ''Le repos pendant la fuite en Égypte'' ( B. 57) and ''Saint Jérôme dans une chambre obscure'' ( B. 105). His technique as an aquafortist developed “considerably”: he abandoned the meticulous treatment of textures so dear to him – as seen in ''Le Persan'' ( B. 152) or ''La Liseuse'' ( B. 345) – to concentrate on the structure of objects and lighting effects, as in ''Mendiants recevant l'aumône à la porte d'une maison'' ( B. 176). He also made greater use of drypoint; La Pièce aux cent florins (1649) represents "all the aspirations, if not all the achievements of an entire decade", thanks to the harmony achieved by exploiting different techniques.


The years 1650–1661

Rembrandt's most creative period was also his most personal, liberated, and artistically pure style. It was also a difficult period for him, both economically and socially (with, for example, his partner Hendrickje, pregnant with his child, being accused of concubinage by the Dutch Reformed Church in 1654, a particularly humiliating episode for Rembrandt). He suffered the effects of a period of economic crisis for Holland, the consequences of British protectionist shipping acts. He was unable to pay off his house in full, debts on the purchase of collector's items, and his paintings earned him less than before. So, in 1656, he formalized his bankruptcy and petitioned the High Court (Hoge Raad van Holland, Zeeland en West-Friesland) for an inventory of his assets (see box) to repay his creditors. In 1658, his partner Hendrickje and Titus set up a partnership to continue the art trade they had begun before these events, and obtained exclusive rights to Rembrandt's works in return for the obligation to maintain them for the rest of his life.This association provided material support for Rembrandt but protected the trade in his works since he no longer had the legal right to do so. Last years In 1663, Hendrickje died and Titus married, leaving Rembrandt completely alone. These events left their mark on Rembrandt's contemporaries, and Joost van den Vondel, the great national poet, like them, drew a parallel with his works, which were considered more obscure than before, describing him as “the friend and son of the shadow, like the nocturnal owl”. Critics of his time, such as Joachim von Sandrart (Teutsche Academie, 1675), Samuel van Hoogstraten (Inleyding tot de Hooge Schoole der Schilderkonst, 1677), Arnold Houbraken (Le Grand Théâtre des peintres néerlandais, 1718-1721) and Gérard de Lairesse (Le Grand Livre des peintres, ou l'Art de la peinture considéré dans toutes ses parties, et démontré par principes ... auquel on a joint les Principes du dessin, 1787) praised his genius, but criticized “his lack of taste, his vulgar naturalism, his careless drawing, and the scarcity of noble subjects in his work”. Rembrandt followed the evolution of the international Baroque towards a more classical phase, but as his personal style reached its zenith, he moved away from that of his contemporaries, closer to Van Dyck, or even his pupils or former workshop companions (Govaert Flinck and Jan Lievens). Despite his image as a misunderstood loner, Rembrandt continued to receive commissions: from private individuals, notably ''Jan Six'' ( B. 285); from guilds, as evidenced by the famous painting ''
Syndics of the Drapers' Guild ''The Sampling Officials'' (), also called ''Syndics of the Drapers’ Guild'' (), is a 1662 oil painting by Rembrandt. It is now in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. It has been described as his "last great collective portrait". The painting is a ...
'' (1662); and even internationally, since an Italian nobleman commissioned a philosopher and received '' Aristotle Contemplating the Bust of Homer'' (1653) and later Alexander the Great (1661) and Homer (1663), as well as 189 etchings in 1669. He also continued to have pupils, notably Philips Koninck and Aert de Gelder. During his last eight years, Rembrandt produced just one etching: a portrait ( B. 264) commissioned as “insignificant”. According to Sophie de Brussière (Petit Palais), Rembrandt's withdrawal from this art form was not due to any impediment linked to old age, but to the fact that he had already completed his exploration of etching techniques - and at the same time achieved what he had been striving for throughout his career as a painter, “light-color” - and was no longer paying attention to it.


Historiography of Rembrandt's etchings


Reference historians

Edme-François Gersaint Edmé-François Gersaint (1694–1750) was a Parisian ''marchand-mercier'' (merchant) who specialised in the sale of works of art and luxury goods and who is noted for revolutionising the art market by preparing, for the first time, detailed catal ...
(1694–1750) was the first to publish a catalog of Rembrandt's engravings, in 1751 (posthumously): le Catalogue raisonné de toutes les pièces qui forment l'œuvre de Rembrandt.This first Rembrandt catalog raisonné is also the very first catalog of the graphic work of a single artist, with a detailed chapter on doubtful attributions and the connoisseur's question of how to distinguish Rembrandt's work from that of his pupils. In this work, Gersaint chose to classify the works not in chronological order, but according to the subject - and in this, he was to be followed by most of his successors - which are: Rembrandt portraits; Old Testament; New Testament; pious subjects, fantasy pieces; beggars, free subjects; landscapes; portraits of men; fantasy heads; portraits of women; studies.Adam von Bartsch (1757-1821), also an aquafortist, wrote a landmark work in this field: ''Catalogue raisonné de toutes les Estampes qui forment l'Œuvre de Rembrandt, et ceux de ses principaux Imitateurs''. In it, he established what became the definitive numbering system, based on his name (e.g. “Bartsch 17” or “B. 17”), for Rembrandt etchings and copies by many other artists, a system still in use today. Ignace Joseph de Claussin (1795–1844), an aquafortist and print dealer, fell in love with Rembrandt when he tried to compile a catalog raisonné of all his prints, including his own engravings after the Dutch master, whose quality misled some specialists. In 1824, he finally published ''Catalogue raisonné de toutes les estampes qui forment l'œuvre de Rembrandt, et des principales pièces de ses élèves'', followed in 1828 by ''Supplément au Catalogue de Rembrandt'', the first of which became a reference work, notably for Charles Henry Middleton, who quoted extensively from it in ''A Descriptive catalog of the etched work of Rembrandt van Rhyn'' (1878), another landmark work. Shortly before the latter, Charles Blanc (1859–1861) had undertaken an ambitious work, L'Œuvre complet de Rembrandt, catalog raisonné de toutes les eaux-fortes du maître et de ses peintures (in two volumes), in 1859-1861. However, André-Charles Coppier (see below), strongly criticized this work: he claimed that Blanc himself had copied forgeries abroad and had them etched by Léopold Flameng to illustrate his third catalog with so-called facsimiles. In 1986, the Petit Palais based its two-volume monograph ''Rembrandt: Eaux-fortes'' on Eugène Dutuit's ''Œuvre gravé de Rembrandt'' (1883), “recognized for the technical perfection of their illustration. This “serious work” is based on the study of his own collection and those of the
French National Library French may refer to: * Something of, from, or related to France ** French language, which originated in France ** French people, a nation and ethnic group ** French cuisine, cooking traditions and practices Arts and media * The French (band), ...
and the British Museum. He broadly follows the categories of his predecessors to study 363 pieces (80 of which are now rejected). Dutuit had a great aesthetic sensitivity, as revealed by the large number of high-quality prints (fine supports, parchment, Japanese or Oriental paper) and very well preserved. He donated the 375 pieces to the Musée du Petit Palais in 1902; Rembrandt: Eaux-fortes presents 175 etchings from this collection. Arthur Mayger Hind is a British specialist in etching, particularly Italian, but has published several works on Rembrandt's etchings: A Catalogue of Rembrandt's Etchings: chronologically arranged and completely illustrated (1900), Etchings of Rembrandt (1907), Rembrandt, With a Complete List of His Etchings (?) and Rembrandt and his etchings. A compact record of the artist's life, his work, and his time (1921). André-Charles Coppier's Les eaux-fortes authentiques de Rembrandt, published in 1929, is also cited by the Petit Palais, which explains that although it is incomplete, it “provides an element of stylistic judgment that is crucial to the difficult evaluation of Rembrandt's production during the Leyden period: the author defines the engraver's handwriting, the point of which twirls ‘in sawtooth scratches, tendrils, and singular zebra marks’. Now, this tracery of great graphic freedom, which has never been well imitated by anyone, characterizes all the artist's etchings, from the earliest to the latest, and is an essential aid in rejecting forgeries."


Catalogue numbers

Specialists categorize Rembrandt's etchings according to whether all the states are Rembrandt's; whether they were reworked and finished by a foreign hand; whether they are known only from a state reworked by a pupil; and those rejected. If we exclude this last category – in which are mainly prints made in the early 1630s, when he was starting at his workshop – Hind counts 29335; Gersaint, 341; Bartsch, 375 and Middleton and Dutuit, 329. André-Charles Coppier excludes 140 pieces from Bartsch's list, rejecting “doubtful pieces, forgeries and erroneous attributions”See also List of Rembrandt engravings for details. - a third of the pieces catalogued by Bartsch in 1797 and by Charles Blanc in 1873 -; he also rejects the prints that Woldemar von Seidlitz added to his 1895 catalogue. Catalogs raisonnés of Rembrandt's engraved works frequently present a table of correspondence between the different notations in each of the reference catalogs raisonnés * "G.": Gersaint, catalog published in 1751; * "Da.": Daulby (1796); * "B.": Bartsch (1797); * "Cl.": Claussin (1824 and 1828); * "W.": Wilson (1836); * "Bl.": Blanc (1859 or 1873); * "M.": Middleton (1878); * "Dut." or “Du.": Dutuit (1880 or 1881-1885); * "R.": Rovinski (1890); * "S.": Seidlitz (1895)Note that while Woldemar von Seidlitz (1895) uses the Bartsch notation, he uses the “S.” notation for prints that Bartsch did not include in his catalog raisonné and that Seidlitz attributes to Rembrandt. The notation chosen for this article is the Bartsch notation, the reference most commonly – and sometimes only – used.André-Charles Coppier's “Catalogue chronologique des eaux-fortes authentiques et de leurs états de la main de Rembrandt” uses only the Bartsch notation. When a work has not been known or recognized by Bartsch, the second notation used is that of Seidlitz (1895). This notation is very often included in the correspondence tables for Rembrandt's print notations35. A correspondence table between the notations of Edme-François Gersaint (Gersaint-Yver-Daulby), Adam von Bartsch and Ignace Joseph de Claussin, sorted by subject, is produced and can be consulted in Thomas Wilson's ''A Descriptive Catalogue of the Prints of Rembrandt'' (1836), starting on page 242; another, even more extensive, was made by Hind in ''A Catalogue of Rembrandt's Etchings: chronologically arranged and completely illustrated'', starting on page 133. Collectors' interest in Rembrandt's prints By producing numerous states of his prints, while maintaining an exclusive attitude, Rembrandt knew how to arouse collectors' interest in him and his work, as
Arnold Houbraken Arnold Houbraken (28 March 1660 – 14 October 1719) was a Dutch people, Dutch Painting, painter and writer from Dordrecht, now remembered mainly as a biographer of Dutch Golden Age painters. Life Houbraken was sent first to learn ''threadt ...
reports in ''De Groote Schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen'' (in French, “''Le Grand Théâtre des peintres néerlandais''”, 1718-1721): “You had to court him embrandtto obtain certain pieces of his work. It was almost ridiculous not to have a print of little Juno crowned and uncrowned, of little Joseph with a white face, and of the same with a black face." Among the prints acquired by Dutuit, many bore the marks of the most prestigious collections, such as John Barnard. A friend of Rembrandt – the latter produced an engraved portrait of him ( B. 272), one of his finest pieces – and a major player in the art market of the time, Clement De Jonghe accumulated a large number of copperplates, including 74 etchings by Rembrandt, which were sold two years after he died in Amsterdam in 1679. Collectors did not hesitate to exhibit them publicly, as Eugène Dutuit did, lending some of his most important Rembrandt prints to prestigious exhibitions attended by numerous collectors, such as those of the Burlington Club - notably the Self-Portrait Engraving ( B. 22) in 1877 – the Cercle de la Librairie prints exhibition and the Central Union exhibition – including the masterpiece ''
The Hundred Guilder Print The ''Hundred Guilder Print'' is an etching with drypoint by Rembrandt, measuring 278 x 388 mm (platemark). The etching's popular name derives from the large sum of money supposedly charged for it. It is also called ''Christ healing the sick'', ...
'' ( B. 74) in 1882. Since Dutuit donated his prints to the Musée du Petit Palais, there have been few exhibitions of Rembrandt's engravings, and these were presented in small numbers. Among the most notable was the “Exhibition of Prints by Rembrandt and Dürer” in 1933, another at the Louvre in 1969 to mark the tercentenary of Rembrandt's death and finally the one at the Petit Palais, Paris in 1986. The fame of Rembrandt's etchings has endured through the centuries. This is partly because he was the first to truly exploit it with such technical and artistic mastery, even though the technique had been around since the 15th century and had not changed very significantly since the 16th.


Technical considerations


Rembrandt's technique

Almost all of Rembrandt's prints are executed in
etching Etching is traditionally the process of using strong acid or mordant to cut into the unprotected parts of a metal surface to create a design in intaglio (incised) in the metal. In modern manufacturing, other chemicals may be used on other type ...
, his process for which is detailed below. However, he also used other techniques such as
drypoint Drypoint is a printmaking technique of the intaglio (printmaking), intaglio family, in which an image is incised into a plate (or "matrix") with a hard-pointed "needle" of sharp metal or diamond point. In principle, the method is practically iden ...
and
engraving Engraving is the practice of incising a design on a hard, usually flat surface by cutting grooves into it with a Burin (engraving), burin. The result may be a decorated object in itself, as when silver, gold, steel, or Glass engraving, glass ar ...
proper (with a burin) for retouching.See list of Rembrandt engravings. The chemical technique of etching was developed in the Middle Ages by Arab armorers to decorate their weapons. It flourished in the southern part of present-day Germany in the 15th century, where the first etchings were printed towards the end of that century. In the early 17th century, Dutch artists such as
Esaias van de Velde Esaias van de Velde (17 May 1587 (baptized) – 18 November 1630 (buried)) was a Dutch Golden Age painter, mainly of landscapes and a printmaker who experimented with etching. Biography He was born in Amsterdam, where his Flemish father H ...
, Jan van de Velde the Younger and
Willem Buytewech Willem Pieterszoon Buytewech (1591/92 – September 23, 1624) was a Dutch Golden Age painter, draughtsman and etcher. He is one of the early specialists in the merry company type of subject in Dutch genre painting. His contemporaries named him ...
experimented with the technique. They sought a better tone and a way to create an atmospheric effect in their landscape prints, breaking away from long contour lines to draw them with small strokes and dots.
Hercules Seghers Hercules Pieterszoon Seghers or Segers ( 1589 – 1638) was a Dutch painter and printmaker of the Dutch Golden Age. Segers is in fact the more common form in contemporary documents, and was used by the painter himself (modern use is about equall ...
in turn experimented with etching, but for different reasons: he tried to reproduce a painterly effect by printing on colored paper or canvas; moreover, he reworked the print after printing with a brush coated with colored paint, making each print unique. Rembrandt quickly became very interested in these developments and pushed the technique to the limit. In his hands, etching became an art form in its own right, occupying him for the rest of his life. He produced some 300 etchings, all of them intended to be original works of art.As opposed to reproduction engraving, the main function of the medium at this time. His mastery of drypoint and the unique deep black of his etchings became famous during his lifetime, and his etchings were particularly sought-after by collectors of his time. An etching can be enhanced using a drypoint and burin, by engraving directly onto the plate - whereas in the etching process, the varnish is removed without touching the plate -See the complete
etching Etching is traditionally the process of using strong acid or mordant to cut into the unprotected parts of a metal surface to create a design in intaglio (incised) in the metal. In modern manufacturing, other chemicals may be used on other type ...
process in the dedicated article.
but the line can be coarse and the effect lost after the press has passed.See the specific features of the
dry point In geography, a dry point is an area of firm or flood-free ground in an area of wetland, marsh or flood plains. The term typically applies to settlements, and dry point settlements were common in history. In the United Kingdom extreme examples ...
in the dedicated article.
Rembrandt never enhanced his etchings at first; but from 1640 onwards, he became more interested in these techniques, particularly the velvet effect produced by drypoint: ''Saint Jerome writing under a tree'' ( B. 103) is an example. He also engraved a number of prints exclusively in drypoint ( B. 76, B. 222, B. 221). When the artist corrects the plate after printing, we speak of a new "
state State most commonly refers to: * State (polity), a centralized political organization that regulates law and society within a territory **Sovereign state, a sovereign polity in international law, commonly referred to as a country **Nation state, a ...
". Virtually all of Rembrandt's prints exist in several states – from minor corrections to genuine new compositions. Variations can also be introduced by inking differently: the artist can choose to leave more or less ink on the plate before it goes under the press. This technique is used in '' The Three Crosses'' ( B. 78), where Rembrandt seeks to accentuate contrasts and achieves a very dark effect by leaving a lot of ink in certain areas of the plate. He also employed the “surface tone”"Surface toning" consists of not cleaning the entire plate, to give a grayish effect by the presence of a little ink scattered over the whole plate or a particular area. technique to give greater depth to the shadows, as in ''Woman with an Arrow'' ( B. 202), or to create an atmospheric effect in his landscapes, as in ''Landscape with a Square Tower'' ( B. 218). It is also noteworthy that Rembrandt made his impressions – unlike the vast majority of artists – precisely to have the freedom to ink according to the desired effect. Finally, Rembrandt also used reverse-proofingA counterproof is a print made in reverse by taking a freshly printed, still-moist proof, laying a sheet on top, and passing the two together under the press. The result is a print of a print - the counterproof - which naturally, by being printed in reverse twice, corresponds exactly to the original composition of the plate. This is useful for correcting small errors or making slight adjustments. technique to make minor corrections, particularly for ''The Three Crosses''. ''Philosopher with an Hourglass'' ( B. 318) has long been considered Rembrandt's only known woodcut. it is not known whether the original drawing is by Rembrandt or Lievens, but all the specialists credited it to Rembrandt; Charles Blanc justified this by saying that “it is worthy of him by the delicacy of the expression and by the learned and precise indication of the philosopher's hand” and that his friend was more his imitator than his pupil. However, it is now definitively attributed to Lievens by the Hollstein. Drawing technique Rembrandt would never have used tracing paper or reference points before tracing his drawing directly onto the varnish. He would have used pencils for very few engravings ( B. 201, B. 271, B. 272). We know that Rembrandt was right-handed, thanks to the hatching he made in his numerous drawings.


Soft varnish

In etching, the varnish serves to protect the plate from the bite of the acid that seeps in where the engraver has removed the varnish with his point. The composition of this varnish has evolved, impacting the aesthetics of the etching. Rembrandt chose a soft varnish, which allows greater flexibility and freedom for the hand, as opposed to the hard varnish borrowed from the violin makers of Florence and Venice and used by Jacques Callot.: Its composition has been known since 1660 and the publication of the treatise The Whole Art of Drawing, Painting, Limning and Etching * virgin wax: 60 g; * Judean bitumen: 60 g; * resin: 30 g; * teardrop putty: 60 g; * Burgundy pitch: 30 g; * turpentine: 15 g. However, according to André Béguin's ''Dictionnaire technique de l'estampe'', which cites Abraham Bosse (''De la manière de graver à l'eau forte et au burin'', 1645, revised by Charles-Nicolas Cochin in 1745), this composition is that of the formula for a varnish taken from a manuscript by Callot. He proposes another formula, called “Vernis de Rimbrandt ic, whose composition is as follows: * virgin wax: 30 g; * tear mastic: 15 g; * asphalt or amber: 25 g. Traditionally, the copper was then varnished with a hot stamp, before being smoked with a torch.


The acid

Once the varnish has been applied and the drawing made on it, the plate is dipped in acid so that it bites where the varnish has been removed. Rembrandt used “Dutch mordant”, which "digs deeper to produce clean, precise lines, unlike nitric acid, which produces broad, rather coarse lines". It consists of: * Water: 1 L; * hydrochloric acid: 125 mL; * potassium chlorate: 25 g; * salt: 25 g.


Inking

Rembrandt made his inksCareful wiping of the copper, often leaving ink only in the sizes, lends a “charm” of “great graphic purity” to his prints. and prints, on two intaglio presses – one made of “island wood”,The expression “island wood” is not a clearly defined term, but it seems to refer to woods intended for cabinet-making: mahogany, ebony, rosewood, gayac, etc. the other of oak – that he had at home,Unlike other artists, who had people – usually students – in their studios to do this. Reproductions of these presses are on permanent display at the Rembrandt House Museum. which enabled him to study the evolution of his plates all the more precisely. To achieve more pictorial effects, Rembrandt did not wipe his plates completely: he sometimes left a light veil of ink on certain smooth areas to obtain a form of “tint”.When this “tinting” technique is used only in certain areas of the composition, we speak of “rolled-up proofs”, as in the case of Saint Jerome reading in an Italian landscape (B. 104).


Support

Several types of paper (European, Japanese, Chinese, etc.) and vellum paper can be used: they vary in color and grain (type of surface). The artist can thus choose the one best suited to the desired effect. Rembrandt always sought to exploit the different possibilities that each support could offer. For example, he initially used only paper made in France (Troyes and Angoulême), as Dutch mills did not produce paper suitable for printmaking until the end of the seventeenth century. The distinctive feature of this Frenchz paper is the integration of a “watermark” into the trellis: a brass mark that leaves a clearer trace, as the paper becomes thinner. This information makes it easier to identify an antique print, but the different watermarks they produce according to the needs of their Dutch customers also vary in motif (B. 81, B. 71, B. 77, B. 340, B. 281, B. 280), although two watermarks are exclusive to Dutch customers: ''the Tête de fou with five or seven boules'' ( B. 116, B. 266, B. 21, B. 103, B. 272, B. 65, B. 67, B. 78, B. 86) and ''the Armes d'Amsterdam''. Towards the end of the 1640s, in his quest for a certain richness of tone, Rembrandt varied the quality of his supports, even to the point of using paper of very inferior quality, such as cardoes paper (for the Dutch; oatmeal paper for the English), a “rather coarse, buff-colored” paper. He sourced paper from Asia, frequently using japon,It was easily imported into the Netherlands thanks to the trade relations between the two countries from 1639 to 1854, via the Dutch East India Company based in Java. a paper with no vergeures, pontuseaux or watermarks, available in a variety of weights and textures, and colors ranging from opaline white to golden, almost tan. Rembrandt appreciated its warm, yellowish color, which was very effective for his landscapes or outdoor scenes ( B. 70, B. 104); the very fine, soft surface of this paper enabled him to exploit the full effect of drypoint. He also used a paper that is erroneously called “Chinese”: a very fine, sometimes lined, gray pearl-colored paper (e.g.: B. 86, 1st state). Finally, Rembrandt used a pale yellow paper similar in appearance to Indian miniatures (presumably from that country). Retouching A print plate can be retouched in a variety of ways, to correct defects or achieve a desired effect; for example, the artist can use a scraper or burnisher, or play with the support by changing the inking or paper type. At each stage, he may make a print to see the intermediate or potentially definitive result: each of these proofs thus corresponds to a state of the print. Observing the succession of these states allows us to follow the progress of the work, and thus to imagine Rembrandt's progress in the elaboration of his print: we can see corrections, premeditated or unpremeditated evolutions, or the search for variation.


Selected prints

Rembrandt's engravings are “traditionally” sorted thematically in catalog raisonnés, according to their classification. The most extensively studied engravings in these catalogs' raisonnés are the following:


Self-portraits

* ''Rembrandt aux yeux hagards'' (1630, etching and burin) * ''Rembrandt with a round hat and embroidered coat'' (1631, etching and drypoint and pen and brown ink drawing) * ''Rembrandt with scarf around his neck'' (1634, etching) * ''Rembrandt and Saskia'' (1636, etching) * ''Rembrandt drawing at the window or Rembrandt engraving'' (1648, etching and drypoint)


Portraits and heads

* ''Jan Uytenbogaert'', known as “The Gold Weigher” (1639, etching and drypoint on silk) * ''Portrait of Jan Six'' (1647, etching, drypoint, and burin) * ''Doctor Fautrieus'', falsely called Faust (ca. 1652, etching, drypoint, and burin) File:B007 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Rembrandt with round hat and embroidered coat.'' (1631,
Rijksmuseum Amsterdam The Rijksmuseum () is the national museum of the Netherlands dedicated to Dutch arts and history and is located in Amsterdam. The museum is located at the Museumplein, Museum Square in the stadsdeel, borough of Amsterdam-Zuid, Amsterdam South, ...
). File:B019 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Rembrandt and Saskia'' (1636, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B281 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Jan Uytenbogaert, this “Le Peseur d'Or”'' File:B285 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Portrait de Jan Six'' (1647, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B270 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Le Docteur Fautrieus.'' (1652, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam).


Biblical and religious subjects

* ''La grande Descente de croix'' (1633, etching and burin) * ''Joseph and Putiphar's Wife'' (1634, etching) * ''La Pièce aux cent florins'' (ca. 1649, etching, drypoint, and burin) * ''Jesus Christ Preaching'', or “''The Little Tomb''” (ca. 1652, etching, drypoint and burin) * ''The Three Crosses'' (1653-ca. 1661, drypoint and burin) * ''Jesus Presented to the People'', or ''Ecce Homo en largeur'' (1655, drypoint on Japanese paper)


Allegorical or mythological subjects

* ''Jupiter and Antiope:'' the large plate (1659, etching, drypoint, and burin) File:B081 Rembrandt.jpg, ''La grande Descente de croix'' (1633, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:Rembrandt, Christ Preaching (La Petite Tombe), circa 1652, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam.jpg, ''Jesus Christ preaching'' (ca. 1652, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:Rembrandt The Three Crosses 1653.jpg, ''Les Trois Croix'' (1653-ca. 1661, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B076 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Jesus presented to the people, or the Ecce Homo in width'' (1655, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B203 Rembrandt.jpg, Jupiter and Antiope: the large plate (1659, British Museum).


Other subjects

* L'ensemble des gueux (1628-1631, etching) * ''La Faiseuse de Koucks'' (1635, etching) * “''La Grande mariée juive”'' (1635, etching, drypoint, burin, black chalk) * ''Three Oriental Figures'' (1641, etching, drypoint) and other Oriental or Polish subjects File:B179 Rembrandt.jpg, Beggar with a wooden leg, known as “Capteyn Eenbeen” (ca. 1630, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B174 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Beggar sitting on a clod of earth'' (1630, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B124 Rembrandt.jpg, ''La Faiseuse de Koucks.'' (1635, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B340 Rembrandt.jpg, ''La Grande mariée juive'' (1635, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B118 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Trois figures orientales'' (1641, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam) File:B348 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Old Woman with Oriental Hairdress'' (Rembrandt's mother?) (1631, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam) File:B142 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Figure polonaise'' (1631, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam)


Landscapes

* ''The Mill'' (1641, etching) * ''The Three Trees'' (1643, etching and drypoint) * ''“La Campagne du peseur d'or”'' (1651, etching and drypoint) Nature morte, free subjects and nudes * ''The Seashell'' (1650, etching, drypoint and burin on paper), Rembrandt's only still life. * ''The Draftsman and his Model'' (unfinished, ca. 1639, etching, drypoint, and burin) * ''The French Bed'' (1646, etching, drypoint, and burin) File:The Three Trees by Rembrandt Rijksmuseum Amsterdam RP-P-OB-444.jpg, ''Les Trois Arbres'' (1643, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B234 Rembrandt.jpg, ''“The Campaign of the Gold Weigher”'' (1651, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B159 Rembrandt.jpg, ''Le Coquillage'' (1650, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:B192 Rembrandt.jpg, ''The Draughtsman and his Model'' (ca. 1639, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam). File:Rembrandt - Le Lit à la française.png, ''Le Lit à la française'' (1646, Bibliothèque nationale de France).


Copper plates


Existing plates

According to the Musée du Petit Palais in 1986, seventy-nine original Rembrandt copperplates are known to exist. In Erik Hinterding's The History of Rembrandt's copperplates (1995), the author surveys the existing plates, lists and describes them all (except Jan Uytenbogaert ( B. 281) and ''Première tête orientale'' ( B. 286), to which he did not have access), and sets out to make an exhaustive list of all the owners of these plates throughout history. Jan Six, a Dutch art collector, was given one of Rembrandt's most beautiful engravings, ''Portrait de Jan Six'' ( B. 285), which is also, according to the Musée du Petit Palais, the most beautiful plate. In 2013, Claude-Jean Darmon described the print as “a masterpiece, without exaggeration, hich countsamong the etchings that reach the highest degree of completion”, adding that “never before has an etcher produced such deep black stamps as those of Jan Six”. It is part of the SixView works that have been in the Six collection on Wikimedia Commons. collection, famous in its day for its paintings, engravings, and drawings. The first known inventory is that made from the collection of Clement De Jonghe in 1679 (two years after his death); de Hoop Scheffer and Boon and Hinterding agree on the authenticity and authorship of all the plates identified in this inventory, with very slight modifications. However, some of the notes lack the precision required to identify the plates. Thanks to Hinterding's table, it is possible to trace the complete provenance of each plate and thus note that, after the sale of the De Jonghe collection, the De Haan sale in 1767 is the most important, where Pierre Fouquet bought many plates that then passed to Watelet, while all the others were scattered between numerous owners or disappeared. In 1767,
Claude-Henri Watelet Claude-Henri Watelet (28 August 1718 – 12 January 1786) was a rich French '' fermier-général'' who was an amateur painter, a well-respected etcher, a writer on the arts and a connoisseur of gardens. Watelet's inherited privilege of farming ...
acquired eighty-one original copper plates, and as an etcher himself, he reworked some of them ( B. 69, B. 119, B. 273, B. 349) or reproduced them in aquatint ( B. 19, B. 43, B. 62, B. 67, B. 68, B. 80, B. 86, B. 128, B. 268, B. 70). At the auction of the Watelet collection in 1786, Pierre-François Basan bought all the plates in his possession (the exact number is uncertain, but Hinterding calculates as many as eighty-three) and immediately published Recueil de quatre-vingt-cinq estampes originales... par Rembrandt, a work that would be published for over a century. Henry-Louis Basan, the former's son, published a list of the plates in his possession in 1803, numbering eighty-four, five of which are no longer accepted as being by Rembrandt. André-Charles Coppier strongly criticized the actions of Watelet and Basan, as well as Baillie (see below) and Norblin de La Gourdaine, who had all “ransacked” the original copperplates in their possession to make their states - thus excluding all etchings from these plates, and the states of those posthumously drawn from his studies. While these various inventories are studied with great attention by specialists, the fate of Rembrandt's plates is subsequently very clear, as the following owners acquire the plate collections en bloc: Auguste Jean (circa 1810); Veuve Jean (1820); Auguste Bernard (1846); Michel Bernard (circa 1875). In 1906, the publisher Alvin-Beaumont bought the original plates and made prints from them, which he published in ''Les cuivres originaux de Rembrandt''; his friend Robert Lee Humber acquired them and deposited them in the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh. In 1956, on the occasion of the 350th anniversary of Rembrandt's birth, the museum organized an exhibition showing these plates along with etchings on loan from the National Gallery of Art in Washington and prints by Alvin-Beaumont. Only two have since been lost: ''La Mort de la Vierge'' ( B. 99) and ''Le Christ se disputant avec les docteurs'': petite plaque ( B. 66). Seventy-seven plates have survived and are preserved by the family of Robert Lee Humber, to which must be added three more, ''Jan Uytenbogaert'' ( B. 281, Rosenwald Collection, Philadelphia), ''Jan Six'' ( B. 285) and ''Première tête orientale'' ( B. 286, Göttingen University Library) to make up the corpus of plates known to Hinterding in 1995 (seventy-nine plates known to the Musée du Petit Palais in 1986). ''The Hundred Guilder Print'' by William Baillie In 1775, Captain William Baillie, a British Army officer and Irish printer, bought the original plate of ''La Pièce aux cent florins'', already quite worn from successive printings, from the American painter and engraver John Greenwood, and printed around a hundred proofs, which he largely reworked directly on the original copper plate. Eventually, he cut the plate into four pieces to make separate proofs, which he later reworked individually; in particular, he added the frame of an arch to the fragment containing Christ. This initiative was highly controversial at the time, considered unworthy by some and welcome by others, as the plate was in poor condition. These final proofs were published by John Boydell. The four original pieces reworked by BailliePlease note: these are the parts of the original proof cut according to Baillie's cuts. These will be reworked by Baillie, so they will be significantly different. To see the four pieces reworked by Baillie, view the image in very low resolution on the bnf.fr website.: File:Hundred Guilder Print - part 1 (Baillie).jpg, Part of the crowd of Pharisees File:Hundred Guilder Print - part 2 (Baillie).jpg, Anonymous figure from behind File:Hundred Guilder Print - part 4 (Baillie).jpg, Whole Christ in the center File:Hundred Guilder Print - part 3 (Baillie).jpg, Entering the room of the poor and the camel


Museum collections

Apart from a few very rare prints, mostly less important early studies, or "the informal printed scribbles from the artist's early years", most of his prints are not very rare by museum standards, and major
print room A print room is a room in an art gallery or museum where a collection of old master print, old master and modern prints, usually together with drawings, watercolours, and photographs, are held and viewed. A further meaning is a room decorated ...
s have good collections. Both the
Rijksmuseum The Rijksmuseum () is the national museum of the Netherlands dedicated to Dutch arts and history and is located in Amsterdam. The museum is located at the Museum Square in the borough of Amsterdam South, close to the Van Gogh Museum, the S ...
and the
British Museum The British Museum is a Museum, public museum dedicated to human history, art and culture located in the Bloomsbury area of London. Its permanent collection of eight million works is the largest in the world. It documents the story of human cu ...
, who claim to have the best collections, have over 1,000 impressions of the 300-odd prints; most of these can be viewed in great detail online. The degree to which these collections are displayed to the public or can easily be viewed by them in the print room, varies greatly.
The Morgan Library & Museum The Morgan Library & Museum (originally known as the Pierpont Morgan Library and colloquially known the Morgan) is a museum and research library in New York City, New York, U.S. Completed in 1906 as the private library of the banker J. P. Morg ...
in New York claims to have the best collection in America, with "impressions of most of the three hundred or so known etchings by Rembrandt, as well as multiple, often exceedingly rare impressions of various states"; it has "almost 500" images online.


On the art market

In the early 20th century, Lucien Monod reported on the market value of Rembrandt's prints. He defined them as “first class”, with estimates ranging from 18 to 100,000 francs (''La Pièce aux cent florins'', sold in New York in 1922 to Harlowe et Cie). A drypoint engraving by Rembrandt, Christ Presented to the People, sold on July 5, 2018 at Christie's for the exceptional printmaking price of 2.9 million euros, purchased, it seems, by New York financier and collector Leon Black. Ger Luijten, former curator of prints at the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam and director of the Fondation Custodia in Paris, explains: “When Rembrandt went bankrupt, and after his death, copper plates were sold and reused to make prints much later. The drawing loses its finesse with the use of the printing plate, and as Paris expert Hélène Bonafous-Murat explains: “Rembrandt's plates were used for reprints until 1900. They are often subsequently resold by unscrupulous people as genuine works by Rembrandt. At the December 19, 2018 sale at the Hôtel Drouot in Paris, a collection of eighty-five original prints by Rembrandt (1606-1669) and thirty-five others after the artist, produced in the Jean family's printing workshop on rue Saint-Jean de Beauvais between 1820 and 1846, was auctioned off for €88,200. The major sale of early engravings at Christie's, New York, on January 29, 2019, features 21 sheets that fetched from $6,000 for a somewhat pale 1637 biblical scene of Abraham, to $468,000 for a Saint Jerome reading in an Italian landscape (B. 104). ''A small Self-portrait at the Window'' (B. 22) from 1648 sold for $35,000, and a chiaroscuro landscape of three trees in a clearing for $324,500. In a New York sale by Christie's on January 24, 2023, 23 engravings by Rembrandt sold for between $5,670 and $730,800 for the fourth state of the Three Crosses, a subject highly prized by major collectors and museums.


Main copyists and "interpreters" of Rembrandt's prints

Rembrandt's prints were copied extensively by artists, and some art historians have even compiled a list of engravings after Rembrandt. His paintings were also made into prints in the days before photographic reproductions. In the 17th century, the main interpreters of Rembrandt's prints were: In the 18th century: In the 19th and 20th centuries: And several other anonymous ones.


In popular culture

In April 2019, the organizers of the Dutch soccer championship announced that to mark Rembrandt Year (2019 being the 350th anniversary of the artist's birth), a special ball would be used for the 2019-2020 season: the "Rembrandtbal" displays prints by the artist, including landscapes and self-portraits. The balloon was presented at the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam.


Prints cited according to Bartsch or Seidlitz numbering

* B. 7, ''Self-portrait in a soft hat and embroidered cloak'', 1631 ( see artwork). * B. 19, ''Self-portrait with Saskia'', 1636 ( see artwork). * B. 21, ''Self-Portrait Leaning on a Stone Sill'', 1639 ( see artwork). * B. 22, ''Rembrandt Drawing at a Window'', 1648 ( see artwork). * B. 23, ''Self-portrait (?) with Plumed Cap and Lowered Sabre'', 1634 ( see artwork). * B. 28, ''Adam and Eve'', 1638 ( see artwork). * B. 34, ''Abraham and Isaac'', 1645 ( see artwork). * B. 39, ''Joseph and Putiphar's wife'', 1634 ( see artwork). * B. 43, ''The Angel Departing from the Family of Tobias,'' 1641 ( see artwork). * B. 44, ''The Angel Appearing to the Shepherds'', 1634 ( see artwork). * B. 48, ''The Circumcision of Christ'', c. 1630 ( see artwork). * B. 51, ''The Presentation in the Temple with the Angel'', 1630 ( see artwork). * B. 57, ''The Rest on the Flight: a Night Piece'', c. 1644 ( see artwork). * B. 59, ''The Rest on The Flight into Egypt'', c. 1626 ( see artwork). * B. 62, ''The'' ''Holy Family'', c. 1632 ( see artwork). * B. 65, ''Christ Disputing with the Doctors: a Sketch'', 1652 ( see artwork). * B. 66, ''Christ Disputing with the Doctors: Small Plate'', 1630 ( see artwork). * B. 67, ''Christ Preaching (La Petite Tombe)'', c. 1652 ( see artwork). * B. 68, ''The Tribute Money'', c. 1635 ( see artwork). * B. 69, ''Christ driving the money-changers from the Temple'', 1635 ( see artwork). * B. 70, ''Christ and the Woman of Samaria'', 1658 ( see artwork). * B. 71, ''Christ and the Woman of Samaria: among Ruins'', 1634 ( see artwork). * B. 72, ''The Raising of Lazarus,'' 1642 ( see artwork). * B. 73, ''The Raising of Lazarus: the Larger Plate'', c. 1632 ( see artwork). * B. 74, ''Christ Preaching (The Hundred Guilder Print)'', c. 1649 ( see artwork). * B. 76, ''Christ Presented to the People: the Oblong Plate'', 1655 ( see artwork). * B. 77, ''Christ before Pilate'', 1636 ( see artwork). * B. 78, ''The Three Crosses'', 1653 ( see artwork). * B. 80, ''The Crucifixion: Small Plate'', c. 1635 ( see artwork). * B. 81, ''The Descent from the Cross: the Second Plate'', 1633 ( see artwork). * B. 86, ''The Entombment'', c. 1652-1656 ( see artwork). * B. 88, ''Christ at Emmaus: the Smaller Plate'', 1634 ( see artwork). * B. 90, ''The Good Samaritan'', 1633 ( see artwork). * B. 91, ''The Return of the Prodigal Son'', 1636 ( see artwork). * B. 99, ''The Death of the Virgin'', 1639 ( see artwork). * B. 103, ''St. Jerome beside the pollard willow'', 1648 ( see artwork). * B. 104, ''Saint Jerome Reading in an Italian Landscape'', c. 1653 ( see artwork). * B. 105, ''St. Jerome in a Dark Chamber'', 1642 ( see artwork). * B. 109, ''Death Appearing to a Wedded Couple from an Open Grave'', 1639 ( see artwork). * B. 116, ''The Small Lion Hunt (with one lion)'', c. 1629 ( see artwork). * B. 119, ''The Strolling Musicians'', c. 1635 ( see artwork). * B. 124, ''The Pancake Woman'', 1635 ( see artwork). * B. 128, ''Woman at a Door-Hatch Talking to a Man and Children'', 1641 ( see artwork). * B. 152, ''The Persian'', 1632 ( see artwork). * B. 164, ''Beggar Man and Beggar Woman Conversing'', 1630 ( see artwork). * B. 173, ''Beggar Seated Warming his Hands at a Chafing Dish'', c. 1630 ( see artwork). * B. 176, ''A Blind Hurdy-gury Player and Family Receiving Alms'', 1648 ( see artwork). * B. 186, ''Le lit à la française'', 1646 ( see artwork). * B. 187, ''The Monk in the Cornfield'', c. 1646 ( see artwork). * B. 201, ''Diana at the Bath'', c. 1631 ( see artwork). * B. 202, ''The Woman with the Arrow'', 1661 ( see artwork). * B. 208, '''Six’s bridge’'', 1645 ( see artwork). * B. 218, ''Landscape with a Square Tower'', 1650 ( see artwork). * B. 221, ''Landscape with a Road beside a Canal'', c. 1652 ( see artwork). * B. 222, ''Clump of Trees with a Vista'', 1652 ( see artwork). * B. 228, ''Cottages beside a Canal'', c. 1645 ( see artwork). * B. 264, ''Jan Antonides van der Linden'', 1665 ( see artwork). * B. 266, ''Jan Cornelis Sylvius, Preacher'', 1633 ( see artwork). * B. 268, ''Young Man in a Velvet Cap'', 1637 ( see artwork). * B. 271, ''Portrait of Cornelis Claesz. Anslo'', 1641 ( see artwork). * B. 272, ''Clement de Jonghe, Printseller'', 1651 ( see artwork). * B. 273, ''Abraham Francen, apothecary,'' c. 1657 ( see artwork). * B. 278, ''Portrait of Dr. Ephraïm Bueno (1599-1665)'', 1647 ( see artwork). * B. 280, ''Jan Cornelis Sylvius, preacher'', 1646 ( see artwork). * B. 281, ''Jan Wtenbogaert'', 1639 ( see artwork). * B. 285, ''Portrait of Jan Six (1618-1700)'', 1647 ( see artwork). * B. 286, ''The First Oriental Head'', 1635 ( see artwork). * B. 318, ''Philosopher with hourglass,'' n. d. ( see artwork). * B. 320, ''Self-portrait in a cap, with eyes wide open'', 1630 ( see artwork). * B. 340, ''The Great Jewish Bride'', 1635 ( see artwork). * B. 342, ''The Little Jewish Bride'' (Saskia in Sainte Catherine), 1638 ( see artwork). * B. 345, ''A Woman, Reading'', 1634 ( see artwork). * B. 349, ''The Artist’s Mother with Her Hand on Her Chest: Small Bust'', 1631 ( see artwork). * B. 365, ''Studies of the Head of Saskia and Others'', 1636 ( see artwork). * B. 366, ''Sheet of studies of men’s heads'', c. 1630-1631 ( see artwork). * B. 367,''Three Heads of Women, One Lightly Etched'' (Saskia), c. 1635-1639 ( see artwork). * B. 374, ''Three Studies of Old Men’s Heads'', c. 1630 ( see artwork). * B. 398, ''The Circumcision of Christ'', c. 1626 ( see artwork).


References


Notes


Bibliography

* * * * * * * * * * * * *Hinterding, Eric, Luijten, Ger, Royalton-Kisch, Martin, ''Rembrandt the Printmaker'', 2000, British Museum Press/Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, * * * * * {{Rembrandt Rembrandt *