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

Landscape with Cottages and a Hay Barn: Oblong

Details
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)
Landscape with Cottages and a Hay Barn: Oblong
etching with touches of drypoint
1641
on laid paper, watermark fragment Strasbourg Lily (Hinterding A.g.)
a very fine impression
printing sharply and clearly, with rich contrasts and depth
slightly uneven on the cityscape at left
with touches of burr on the signature and elsewhere
the subtle plate tone more prominent towards the edges
with small margins
some small rustspots and foxmarks and other small defects
generally in good condition
Plate 128 x 322 mm.
Sheet 133 x 330 mm.
Provenance
Unidentified, letters LLU in pencil verso (not in Lugt).
Dr Wilhelm August Ackermann (1793-1865), Lübeck and Dresden (Lugt 791); his sale, R. Weigel, Leipzig, 29 March 1853, lot 703 ('Vortrefflicher erster Abdruck mit Plattengrat in köstlicher Frische. Sehr seltenes Capitalbt.‘) (Th. 64)
With P. & D. Colnaghi & Co., London (with their stocknumber C9519 in pencil verso - dated June-July 1922).
With Kennedy Galleries, New York.
Sam Josefowitz (Lugt 6094); acquired from the above in 1969 (according to Stogdon); then by descent to the present owners.
Literature
Bartsch, Hollstein 225; Hind 177; New Hollstein 199 (this impression cited)
Stogdon p. 314

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Stefano Franceschi
Stefano Franceschi Specialist

Lot Essay

In Landscape with a Cottage and a Haybarn, the distant views on either side of the cottage juxtapose town and country, urban and rural life. In fact, three elements are being contrasted - a rich city on the left, a wealthy manor house on the right, and a humble rural dwelling in the centre. Although realistic in detail, the complete composition it is undoubtedly a work of Rembrandt's imagination, created in his studio from various motifs observed in the surrounding countryside. The town in the distance at left is Amsterdam, and most scholars agree that the building on the right are the ruins of main residence of the amusingly named Kostverloren estate, which Rembrandt drew on more than one occasion (see Benesch 1270).

In an essay on Rembrandt’s landscapes, Cliff Ackley characterised the cottage as ‘an island, a central mass or hub around which open space circulates. The circular motion around the farm is emphasized by well-worn curving paths and drainage ditches as well as patterns of light and shadow…The landscape is enlivened by signs of human activity that slowly reveal themselves: two children fishing in the ditch, a figure accompanied by a dog crossing a bridge over it, figures dimly perceived at the window and door of the cottage, and a boat moored in the river before Kostverloren.’ (Ackley, 2003, pp. 188-9).

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