Apr 18, 2024 - Sale 2666

Sale 2666 - Lot 134

Price Realized: $ 4,000
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 4,000 - $ 6,000
REMBRANDT VAN RIJN
Christ Receiving the Children and Healing the Sick (The Hundred Guilder Print).

Etching, engraving and drypoint, center section only, circa 1648. 278x191 mm; 11x7½ inches, narrow margins. Biörklund's second state (of 2); Usticke's fifth state (of 5); White and Boon's second state (of 2); New Hollstein's fourth state A (of 4 B), the rectangular plate (before the arched upper section), after the plate was cut into sections by William Baillie. Small bunch of grapes watermark. A very good, dark, well-inked impression with strong contrasts and all the details distinct.

The original copper plate for this etching was owned by a Dutch collector after Rembrandt's (1606-1669) death and was sold to the American artist John Greenwood (1727-1792) around 1775. Greenwood originally worked in Boston and during the early 1770s relocated to London, where in addition to continuing to practice as a portrait painter and engraver, he became a successful art dealer. He owned The Hundred Guilder Print plate for just a short time, selling it to Captain William Baillie (1723-1810), an officer in the English army and a professional printmaker, who after acquiring the plate, reworked it and issued an "edition" of some 100 impressions before ultimately cutting up the plate, and further printing impressions from four different pieces of the plate.

According to a summary of this important etching by Luijten, "That it is known in only two 17th century states, with the minor difference between them of additional shading over the neck of the donkey on the right and the far wall of the archway, belies the exceptional effort that the plate represents in terms of imaginative power, technical brilliance and pictorial finish. Rembrandt applies every tool at his command and in a variety of styles, from the freely outlined Pharisees in debate on the left, flooded in light, to the precise rendering of the textures that apparel the figures who enter from the right. All the groups are subjugated to the overriding chiaroscuro, which ranges from the deep blacks into which Christ's halo melts away, to the areas left white which suggest a sudden source of startling illumination. The play of shadows is nowhere made more manifest than by the dark silhouette cast on Christ's robe by the central figure with praying hands," (Rembrandt the Printmaker, London, 2000, pages 253-54). Bartsch 74; Biörklund 49-1; Hollstein (White and Boon) 74; New Hollstein 239.