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

Landscape with Cottages and a Hay Barn: Oblong

细节
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 N.a.)
a brilliant, very early impression
printing darkly and richly, with intense contrasts and great depth
with much burr on the signature and elsewhere
the cityscape at left and the countryside at right remarkably clear
trimmed on or just inside the platemark
the sheet slightly toned, with staining and scattered foxmarks
generally in good condition
Sheet 127 x 320 mm.
来源
Marsden Jasael Perry (1850-1935), Providence, Rhode Island (Lugt 1880); his sale, H. G. Gutekunst, Stuttgart, 18-23 May 1908, lot 1295 ('Hauptblatt in einem Abdruck von unübertrefflicher Schönheit, voll Grat. Von dieser Qualität äusserst selten'). (Mk. 4,500; to Keppel) (this impression cited in Lugt)
With Keppel & Co., New York (with their stocknumber a51718 in pencil verso and their label and no. 2493 on the backboard).
John Stanley Ames, USA; acquired from the above in 1909; by descent to the present owner.
出版
Bartsch, Hollstein 225; Hind 177; New Hollstein 199

荣誉呈献

Stefano Franceschi
Stefano Franceschi Specialist

拍品专文

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 center. Although realistic, 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 the main residence of the amusingly named Kostverloren estate, which Rembrandt was to draw on more than one occasion (see Benesch 1270).
In an essay on Rembrandt’s landscapes Cliff Ackley characterized 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.’ (C. Ackley et. al., Rembrandt's Journey - Painter, Draftsman, Etcher, exh. cat., Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2003, p. 188-9.)
The present example compares well with the Malcolm impression in the British Museum.

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