1606 – 1669

Rembrandt van Rijn

1606 – 1669

Rembrandt van Rijn

Most of the Fondation William Cuendet & Atelier de Saint Prex’s sixty prints by Rembrandt come from the collection of Pastor Cuendet, who owned examples from the Dutch artist’s remarkable series of prints illustrating the Scriptures. The finest examples from Cuendet’s collection, many of which depict Jesus preaching amidst both disciples and adversaries, are The Hundred-Gulden Coin and Christ Preaching also called La Petite Tombe. The Fondation’s copy of Rembrandt’s The Three Crosses and an exceptional print of his Descent from the Cross by Torchlight are other highlights of its holdings. Gérard de Palézieux's bequest further enriched the Fondation’s collection of works by Rembrandt. That gift included a copy of The Flight into Egypt, an image reworked on a copperplate by Hercule Segers, and a print entitled The Reclining Negress, although it is probably simply a nude woman reclining in the half-light of an alcove.

Read more

Rembrandt van Rijn was born in 1606 in the university town of Leiden, at the dawn of a prosperous period for the Dutch Republic. As a young man, he gave up his classical studies to devote himself entirely to art, apprenticing with a painter in his hometown before perfecting his technique in the Amsterdam studio of Pieter Lastman, a history painter. Thereafter he set up his own studio in Leiden, then settled permanently in Amsterdam in 1631, at the age of twenty-five. Rembrandt quickly found success with both his portraits and his group paintings, the most famous of which is perhaps Dr Tulp's Anatomy Lesson. These prosperous early years coincided with his first marriage, though they were to be followed by more bitter decades. Yet despite the personal tragedies, financial setbacks and the disinterest of his contemporaries that followed, Rembrandt never abandoned his genius, as his distinctive late masterpieces testify. Printmaking, which Rembrandt practiced since his start in Leiden, occupied an important place in his career. The medium allowed him to experiment, as shown by his many etched self-portraits, and they were also a practical means of disseminating his work to a larger public. But above all it was the expressive properties of printmaking that attracted the Dutch master. With his treatment of chiaroscuro and his mastery of composition and staging, Rembrandt made full use of the language of etching, which came with a graphic flexibility that burin engraving didn’t offer. His characteristic technique, with its abundance of irregular strokes, spontaneous gestures and retouches, gave rise to exceedingly powerful compositions. From the 1640s, in addition to his self-portraits, portraits of notables and genre scenes, Rembrandt increasingly etched landscapes, such as the famous Three Trees. But it was undoubtedly in his scenes from the Bible that Rembrandt's genius for printmaking flourished, particularly in crowd scenes such as The Hundred-Gulden Coin, Ecce Homo and The Three Crosses.

  • FWC&ASP-1978-0133(scan-600-dpi,-HD,-2020)

    Christ Seated Disputing with the Doctors

    1654
    Etching on Japanese laid paper
    93 x 144 mm
    Bartsch 64; Rovinski 64; Hollstein 277; Münz 230
    FWC&ASP-1978-0133

    © photo : Olivier Christinat
  • FWC&ASP-1978-0140(HD,-Olivier-Christinat,-2016)

    The Hundred Guilder Print

    circa 1649
    Etching, chisel, and drypoint on laid paper
    280 x 397 mm
    Bartsch 74; Rovinski 74; Hollstein 236; Münz 217; Nowell-Usticke/White-Boon 74
    FWC&ASP-1978-0140

    © photo : Olivier Christinat
  • FWC&ASP-1978-0144(HD,-Olivier-Christinat,-2016)

    Descent from the Cross by Torchlight

    1654
    Etching and drypoint on laid paper
    210 x 161 mm
    Bartsch 83; Rovinski 83; Hollstein 280; Münz 232; Nowell-Usticke/White-Boon 83
    FWC&ASP-1978-0144

    © photo : Olivier Christinat
  • FWC&ASP-1978-0152(HD,-Olivier-Christinat,-2016)

    The Small Lion Hunt (with one Lion)

    Circa 1629
    Etching on laid paper
    157 x 119 mm
    Bartsch 116; Rovinski 115; Hollstein 6; Münz 251; Nowell-Usticke/White-Boon 116 FWC&ASP-1978-0152

    © photo : Olivier Christinat
  • FWC&ASP-1978-0156(HD,-Olivier-Christinat,-2016)

    Beggar Seated on a Bank, looking like Rembrandt

    1630
    Etching and drypoint on laid paper
    117 x 70 mm
    Bartsch 174; Rovinski 174; Hollstein 11; Münz 115
    FWC&ASP-1978-0156

    © photo : Olivier Christinat

Artists

B

  • 1721 – 1780

    Bernardo Bellotto

  • 1882 – 1951

    Henry Bischoff

  • 1867 – 1947

    Pierre Bonnard

  • 1822 – 1885

    Rodolphe Bresdin

C

  • 1697 – 1768

    Canaletto

  • 1907 – 1990

    Albert Chavaz

  • 1796 – 1875

    Camille Corot

D

  • 1943 – 2018

    Marianne Décosterd

  • 1834 – 1917

    Edgar Degas

  • 1471 – 1528

    Albrecht Dürer

F

  • 1836 – 1904

    Henri Fantin-Latour

  • 1909 – 1994

    Albert Flocon

G

  • 1716 – 1785

    Jacques-Fabien Gautier-Dagoty

  • 1746 – 1828

    Francisco Goya

L

  • 1930 – 2023

    Jean Lecoultre

  • 1600 – 1682

    Claude Gellée (Le Lorrain)

  • 1939 – ...

    Ilse Lierhammer

M

  • 1832 – 1883

    Édouard Manet

  • 1598 – 1688

    Claude Mellan

  • 1890 – 1964

    Giorgio Morandi

N

  • 1623 – 1678

    Robert Nanteuil

P

  • 1919 – 2012

    Gérard de Palézieux

  • 1881 – 1973

    Pablo Picasso

  • 1720 – 1778

    Piranèse (Giovanni Battista Piranesi)

  • 1830 – 1903

    Camille Pissarro

Q

  • 1942 – ...

    Edmond Quinche

R

  • 1840 – 1916

    Odilon Redon

  • 1606 – 1669

    Rembrandt van Rijn

S

  • 1930 – ...

    Pietro Sarto

T

  • 1905 – 1985

    Pierre Tal Coat

V

  • 1875 – 1963

    Jacques Villon

  • 1868 – 1940

    Édouard Vuillard

Y

  • 1905 – 1984

    Albert-Edgard Yersin