Rembrandt, Harmensz van Rijn, Landscape with a Cow, c. 1650
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Harmensz van Rijn Rembrandt, Gravure à l'eau-forte, Landscape with a Cow, c. 1650 ![]() |
| Artiste: | Rembrandt, Harmensz van Rijn (1606 - 1669) |
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| Titre: | Landscape with a Cow, c. 1650 |
| Référence: | B. 237, Holl. 237, H. 240 |
| Moyen: | Gravure à l'eau-forte |
| Taille d'image: | 5 1/8 in x 4 1/8 in (13 cm x 10.3 cm) |
| Taille de feuille: | 5 1/2 in x 4 3/8 in (14 cm x 11.1 cm) |
| Taille encadrée: | approx. 20 in x 15 in (50.8 cm x 38.1 cm) |
| Edition: | According to Nowell-Usticke, a State IV (of VI) impression; Biörklund's State III (of III); White and Boon's State III (of III); printed on a fine laid paper. |
| Condition: | A good, evenly inked impression with no damage and a visible plate mark; fine drypoint evenly visible. |
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Prix
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Article# 2812
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| MFA SALE | $12,000 |
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Atmospheric and alluring, this lovely etching shows Rembrandt's native landscape. The work functions as a window onto simpler, quiet times, and creates a meditative viewing experience. |
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| Description historique: | |
| Grazing peacefully in the foreground, a cow stands amidst a serene landscape.
Rembrandt utilizes intricate, cross-hatched lines to convey the barn house in
the midground and the leaves on the gently swaying trees that dot the grassy
fields. The cow appears to stand at the bank of a body of water, perhaps taking
a cool drink. Rembrandt captures the reflective surface of water, subtly relaying
the reflection of the lakeside shrubbery. The sloping hills that gently trail
off into the distance add a sense of depth to the composition and leave the
impression that the viewer is looking onto a vast country landscape that stretches
on for miles without urban interference.
Created in c. 1650, this original etching is printed on a fine laid paper. According to Nowell-Usticke, this work is a State IV (of VI) impression; Biörklund's State III (of III); White and Boon's State III (of III). Documented and Illustrated in: About the Framing: | |
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La biographie de Harmensz van Rijn Rembrandt
Harmensz van Rijn Rembrandt (1606 - 1669)
Rembrandt was born in Leiden and died in Amsterdam. He was the son of a miller and a baker's daughter, and was originally intended to become a scholar. He went to Latin School and then enrolled at the University of Leiden. After only a year he left to become apprenticed from 1622 to 1624 to a mediocre Leiden painter, Jacob van Swanenburgh. More important for his artistic development, however, was the short period of about six months that he spent training under Pieter Lastman in Amsterdam. In 1625 he began a working association with his friend Jan Lievens in Leiden, finally moving to Amsterdam in 1631/32. In the history of Dutch painting this date represents an important milestone, as Rembrandt was to become the incomparable representative of Amsterdam art. He soon established himself in Amsterdam, received many commissions and opened a large workshop. In 1634 he married Saskia, a lawyer's daughter, who brought a considerable dowry into the marriage.
In 1639 he bought a large house, never quite paid for, which he filled with works of art and curios. Soon his passion for collecting exceeded his finances. In 1642, the year he painted "The Night Watch" Saskia died, and from 1649 he lived with Hendrickje Stoffels whom he could not marry without losing Saskia's legacy to their son Titus. In 1656 he went bankrupt, and his house and all possessions were put up for compulsory auction. Rembrandt spent his final years in poverty and isolation in rooms on the outskirts of Amsterdam, his powers of creation undiminished.
Rembrandt was the most universal artist of his time and he influenced painting for half a century, irrespective of schools or regional style. From his many fields of activity his pupils developed their own specialties, ranging from trompe l'oeil painting to the very detailed Leiden style. Unlike most Dutch painters of the time, who worked in fairly narrow fields, Rembrandt depicted almost every type of subject.
Although Amsterdam's leading portraitist for a decade ("Jan Six", Amsterdam, Foundation Six), also doing group portraits (The Staalmeesters," he was a painter of numerous biblical scenes ("The Sacrifice of Isacc," St. Petersburgh, Hermitage), of the mythological works works ("Philemon and Baucis", Washington, National Gallery) and landscapes ("Landscape in Thunders Brunswik, Herzog-Utrich-Museum) as well at life. In his work, branches of painting often overlapped, as for example in the group portrait "The Night Watch," where he took liberties with a number of rules. Rembrandt's fame rests on his continual development of pictorial devices and unvarying excellence of execution (unlike the works of Rubens, man which were left in part to workshop routine), a well as on his brilliant handling of light and shade and his ability to suggest states of mind through facial expression.
Apart from his greatness as a painter he was a powerful draughtsman and etcher. About 300 of these Rembrandt etchings survive. In this field he extended the technique and artistic possibilities, for example introducing the chiaroscuro effect, raising it to an art for in its own right. Amongst his approximately 15 drawings, the landscape scenes are particularly captivating in their serenity and harmony. Rembrandt's The Hundred Guilder Print is one of his most valuable and sought after etchings.











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