REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN

Jupiter and Antiope: The Larger Plate (B., Holl. 203; H. 302; BB. 59-B)

Details
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN
Jupiter and Antiope: The Larger Plate (B., Holl. 203; H. 302; BB. 59-B)
etching, engraving and drypoint, 1659, on golden Japan, first state (of two), a very fine, sumptuous impression, with considerable burr to the drypoint lines, printed with a rich warm tone, with small margins beyond the crisp inky platemark and sharply defined corners, an unobtrusive, slightly diagonal crease at center, a few insignificant thin spots at the sheet edges showing only on the reverse, otherwise in very good condition; and Jupiter and Antiope (B. 17), by Annibale Carracci
P. 5 3/8 x 7 7/8in. (137 x 200mm.) (2)
Provenance
Rembrandt, Josef Camesina de Pomal (L. 429)
Artaria & Co. (L. 90)
Friedrich August II (L. 971)
Dr. Otto Schäfer, his stamp verso (not in Lugt)
Carracci:
P. Mariette, 1667 (L. 2096)
J. Peoli (L. 2020)
The William Hayes Fogg Art Museum of Harvard University, duplicate, their stamp verso (not in Lugt)
Dr. Otto Schäfer, his stamp verso (not in Lugt)

Lot Essay

Described in the old inventories and sale catalogues as Venus and a Satyr, the title adopted by Gersaint in his catalogue raisonné of 1751, this is now accepted as actually depicting Jupiter and Antiope the subject of the smaller 1631 etching (B. 204, see following lot).

A favorite subject in late renaissance art, this composition is based on an engraving by Annibale Carracci, an impression of which is also included in the Lot. Rembrandt altered Caracci's composition, dispensing with the narrative distractions such as the distant landscape and the hovering amor, in order to concentrate more fully on a nude at rest. The scene depicted is far removed from the ravages which will follow. As with the other most desirable impressions of late nudes, this example is on warm toned Japanese paper which gives a special softness to the drypoint lines, to the light and to the subject itself.