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

Ephraim Bonus, Jewish Physician

细节
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)
Ephraim Bonus, Jewish Physician
etching with drypoint and engraving, 1647, on laid paper, without watermark, a very good impression of the second, final state, printing with burr on the cloak and the banister, just beginning to show a little wear in the densely worked areas, with narrow margins and the full blank border below
Plate 242 x 179 mm.
Sheet 246 x 180 mm.
来源
With Kennedy Galleries, New York (their stock number a37983 in pencil verso).
出版
Bartsch, Hollstein 278; Hind 226; New Hollstein 237
注意事项
This lot has been imported from outside of the UK for sale and placed under the Temporary Admission regime. Import VAT is payable at 5% on the hammer price. VAT at 20% will be added to the buyer’s premium but will not be shown separately on our invoice.

荣誉呈献

Tim Schmelcher
Tim Schmelcher International Specialist

拍品专文

Ephraim Hezekiah Bueno (1599-1665), or Bonus, was a prominent physician in Amsterdam and came from a Sephardic family of doctors. As a wealthy, literary man who both translated and wrote poetry, he was a friend and supporter of Menasseh ben Israel, the theologian and publisher, and Rembrandt's neighbour on the Jodenbreestraat. It might well have been Menasseh who introduced Rembrandt to Bueno, thereby prompting the commission of this portrait.

Whilst most of his etched portraits were worked directly onto the plate, this etching is based on a small oil sketch, now in the Rijksmuseum (inv. no. SK-A-3982). Although immediately recognisable, the etching is quite different from the sketch. While the little painting concentrates entirely on the doctor's features, in the etching Rembrandt added most of the body and all of the setting. More importantly however, he changed the expression of the sitter: in the sketch Bonus looks directly at us, while in the print his right eye is diverted and seems to look into the middle distance. His stance at the foot of the staircase, hand resting on the banister, is quite formal and imposing, yet his distracted, introspective expression lends this portrait a sense of intimacy and melancholy. Whereas in the oil panel Rembrandt painted only the surface of the face, in the etched plate 'he succeeds in getting beneath the skin, and suggesting the inner life of the sitter' (White, 1999).

The first state of the print can be regarded as a proof state and is exceedingly rare (only three impressions are known, all in public collections). Rembrandt completed the plate by adding some shading to the banister, to the areas between the balusters and deliberately removing the heavy burr on Bueno's ring. No late impressions of this print are known, and although Hinterding and Rutgers (New Hollstein 2008) identified two editions 'the quality of these sheets is always so good that it is not easy to say which of the two editions is the earlier.'

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