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

Jupiter and Antiope: smaller Plate

Details
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)
Jupiter and Antiope: smaller Plate
etching and engraving
circa 1631
on laid paper, without watermark
a fine impression of this uncommon, early erotic print
second, final state
printing with touches of burr, just beginning to show some wear
trimmed to or just outside the platemark
some very pale staining
generally in good condition
Plate & Sheet 83 x 110 mm.
Provenance
K. F. F. von Nagler (1770-1846), Bavaria and Berlin (Lugt 2529); sold as part of his collection to the Prussian state in 1835.
Kupferstichkabinett der Staatlichen Museen, Berlin (Lugt 1606), with their de-accession stamp (Lugt 234); their sale, Amsler & Ruthardt, Berlin, 1 March 1886 (and following days), lot 578 ('Schöner Abdruck. Coll. Nagler') (Mk. 41.50; to Sagert).
Probably with Hermann Sagert (1822-1889), German dealer and printmaker, Berlin (without stamp and not in Lugt).
Rudolf Peltzer (1825-1910), Cologne (Lugt 2231); his sale, H. G. Gutekunst, Stuttgart, 2-8 May 1913, lot 1257 ('Vorzüglicher Abdruck mit Rändchen. Berliner Museums-Dublette') (Mk. 91; to Gaa).
Dr. Carlos Gaa (1871 - d. circa 1925), Germany (without his mark, see Lugt 538); his sale, C. G. Boerner, Leipzig, 5-6 May 1926, lot 814 ('Vorzüglicher Abdruck mit etwas Rändchen. Aus der Sammlung Peltzer'). (unsold at Mk. 200).
Karl & Faber, Munich, 11-12 June 1970, lot 169.
Sam Josefowitz (Lugt 6094); acquired at the above sale; then by descent to the present owners.
Literature
Bartsch, Hollstein 204; Hind 44; New Hollstein 78 (this impression cited)
Stogdon p. 309

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Lot Essay

Rembrandt’s Jupiter and Antiope: smaller Plate is one of the artist’s earliest treatments of a mythological subject and one of his rare forays into the erotic genre. The print depicts the god Jupiter, transformed into a satyr, leaning over the sleeping Antiope, whose body lies illuminated in a tender and vulnerable repose. The scene is intimate rather than overtly sensual, with the light touch characteristic of Rembrandt’s early 1630s work.

Executed when the artist was refining his command of etching and drypoint, the small plate contrasts markedly with the large plate of the same subject completed almost thirty years later, where the focus lies almost entirely on Jupiter's gaze at the naked body and the tension between the two figures (see Christie's, London, 7 December 2023, lot 69). The present print is more atmospheric, with the tighter format and light shading of the background evoking the intimacy of Antiope's bed chamber. Hinterding has noted how convincingly Rembrandt renders Antiope’s sleep, her features relaxed with a naturalism rarely attempted by his contemporaries.

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