REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)

The Baptism of the Eunuch

Details
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)
The Baptism of the Eunuch
etching with touches of drypoint
1641
on firm laid paper, partial watermark Strasbourg Lily (Hinterding J.b.)
a very good but slightly later impression
third state (of four)
printing sharply, with good clarity and contrasts
with touches of burr in places and a light plate tone
with small margins
generally in very good condition
Plate 178 x 210 mm.
Sheet 188 x 220 mm.
Provenance
With Mayfair Kunst A. G. (Ira Gale), with his code 1331/RR in pencil verso, Zug.
Sam Josefowitz (Lugt 6094); acquired from the above in 1972; then by descent to the present owners.
Literature
Bartsch, Hollstein 98; Hind 182; New Hollstein 186 (this impression cited)
Stogdon p. 282

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Stefano Franceschi
Stefano Franceschi Specialist

Lot Essay

Rembrandt’s The Baptism of the Eunuch, etched in 1641, presents a moment of conversion, but also of welcoming of a stranger. The Ethiopian court official kneels beside a stream, his ornate robes gathered around him, as Philip prepares to baptise him. The composition is open and luminous, with the figures lightly etched against a pale, sketch-like landscape. The composition has the spatial delicacy that marks Rembrandt’s finest work of the early 1640s, and the tonality is deliberately restrained, allowing the event to emerge through gesture and placement rather than heavy contrast.

The print draws on a subject Rembrandt had explored in three earlier paintings, all indebted to his teacher Pieter Lastman (1583-1633), who depicted the baptism of the Ethiopian eunuch from the Book of Acts (8:26-40) multiple times. The horseman’s plumed headdress, for instance, echoes Lastman’s exotic motifs, though Rembrandt reinterprets them with greater subtlety. The figure of the eunuch derives from an earlier red chalk sketch made by Rembrandt around 1635, while the horseman’s attire and bearing betrays his familiarity with Persian and Mughal miniatures. Hinterding thought that the print’s lightness of touch anticipated the silverpoint-like etchings of the mid-1640s, such as Saint Peter in Penitence (B. 96; New Holl. 225) or The Rest on the Flight into Egypt: lightly etched (B. 58; New Holl. 227).

The Baptism of the Eunuch is formally ambitious. The figures are arranged in a shallow arc, the landscape recedes with minimal intervention, and the water’s surface is left almost untouched. The result is a print that rewards close looking: subtle, deliberate, and quietly expansive.

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