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

Self-Portrait in a Cap and Scarf with the Face dark: Bust

Details
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)
Self-Portrait in a Cap and Scarf with the Face dark: Bust
etching
1633
on laid paper, without watermark
a very good, strong yet slightly later impression
third state (of five)
printing sharply, with good contrasts and much inky relief
with a selectively wiped plate tone on and around the figure
with small margins
very pale scattered foxing
generally in good condition
Plate 131 x 104 mm.
Sheet 134 x 108 mm.
Provenance
Hermann Weber (1817-1854), Bonn (without stamp, see Lugt 1383); his posthumous sale, R. Weigel, Leipzig, 28 April 1856, lot 25 ('... d'une rare beauté, les ombres de la toque très nourries; le bord gauche du papier un peu éraillé') (Rt. 6.10).
Kunstsammlungen der Veste Coburg, Kupferstichkabinett (with their duplicate stamp, Lugt 451a, twice, in grey and brown ink, respectively); presumably their sale, C. G. Boerner, Leipzig, 10 May 1929 and following days, lot 861 ('Brillanter früher Abdruck, mit Rändchen, wie er selten vorkommt. Aus der Sammlung Weber').
With Theodore B. Donson, New York.
Sam Josefowitz (Lugt 6094); acquired from the above in 1988; then by descent to the present owners.
Literature
Bartsch, Hollstein 17; Hind 108; New Hollstein 120
Stogdon p. 257

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Stefano Franceschi
Stefano Franceschi Specialist

Lot Essay

This is the first self-portrait Rembrandt made after 1631 and since his early facial studies of himself (see lots 1-4), and the first he signed with his full name. It is decidedly more ambitious, formal and composed than the small plates of the previous years. The print is larger, his dress more elaborate and the weight and structure of lines and hatchings is more varied than before. The depiction of light and shade continues to occupy him, but he approaches it here with greater confidence and added complication, by depicting himself illuminated mainly from behind, with only the lower part of his left cheek and ear catching full light, while most of the face and chest lies in darkness. Rembrandt's ability to create the finest gradations of darkness on a copperplate would become one of the most astonishing features of his printed oeuvre (see for example lots 18, 30, 32, 39, 40, 94 & 96), but we can already see him honing his skills here.
Presumably to add interest and swagger to his likeness, he continued to depict himself dressed in unusual garments (see also lot 5). In this portrait he wears a military-style dress in an informal manner, complete with a 'point', a button on his shoulder with laces for attaching armour, and sports an East Indian scarf that features in other works of the period.
The present impression was probably made by the Amsterdam jeweller and art dealer Jean de Bary, who owned 29 of Rembrandt's copper plates, and reprinted and manipulated them with considerable plate tone. He sold the plates in 1759, a fact which provides a terminus ante quem for the present impression.

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