Details
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)
Jan Lutma, Goldsmith
etching with engraving and drypoint
1656
on light tan Japan paper
a very fine, harmonious impression of this important portrait
second/ third state (of five), rare on this paper
printing with considerable burr, inky plate edges and a selectively wiped, atmospheric plate tone
with margins
in very good condition
Plate 192 x 149 mm.
Sheet 213 x 170 mm.
Provenance
Probably Nathaniel Smith (1740⁄41 - circa 1809), London (without mark, see Lugt 2296; inscribed with the number 36 in brown ink at the upper left sheet corner recto).
With David Tunick, New York (with his codes DT14 and DTIA in pencil verso).
With August Laube Kunsthandel, Zurich; acquired from or on consignment from the above (according to Stogdon).
Sam Josefowitz (Lugt 6094); acquired from the above in 1983; then by descent to the present owners.
Literature
Bartsch, Hollstein 276; Hind 290; New Hollstein 293 (this impression cited)
Stogdon 120
Exhibited
Les Musées d'Art et d'Histoire, Cabinet des Éstampes. Geneva, États & Achèvement dans la Gravure du XVI au XX Siècle, 1986.

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Stefano Franceschi
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Lot Essay

The etched portraits of the late 1650s are arguably Rembrandt's greatest and most elaborate. During this period he depicted a number of fellow artists, collectors, publishers and craftsmen – men whom he respected and was friendly with. While his family portraits are mostly quick, spontaneous sketches, these more formal portraits are complex investigations into the character of his sitters. The present portrait of the goldsmith Jan Lutma is perhaps one of the most captivating portraits of all.

Jan Lutma (circa 1584-1669) was one of the leading goldsmiths and jewellers in Amsterdam at the time, and a great collector of prints – his son Jan Lutma the Younger was an etcher. There is a gentle pride in the way the aging craftsman presents himself, seated in a large armchair, surrounded by the accoutrements and products of his profession: a hammer and punches are placed on the table next to him; there is a chased silver bowl; and in his right hand he holds a figurine or candlestick.

Yet Rembrandt shows him sunk deep in thought, almost unaware or simply uninterested in the act of portrayal. His eyes are shadowed and half-closed, attesting to the fact that his eyesight was beginning to wane. This work is testament to Rembrandt’s skill and deeply considered approach to his sitter; he conveys the sense of gentle resignation, as Lutma’s passion for his work is threatened by his age and failing eyesight – an issue of some concern to Rembrandt himself.

It appears that New Hollstein's second and third states are indeed identical and that the inscription underneath the window and the barely legible one in the densely worked area at lower right were in fact engraved at the same time. What we do know with certainty is that François Lutma's address at lower right had been added during the artist's lifetime, since Rembrandt outlived François by five years.

More from The Sam Josefowitz Collection: Graphic Masterpieces by Rembrandt van Rijn - Part III

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