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

View of the Diemerdijk with a Milkman and Cottages ('Het Melkboertje')

细节
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)
View of the Diemerdijk with a Milkman and Cottages ('Het Melkboertje')
etching and drypoint
circa 1650
on laid paper, without watemark
a very good impression of this small, rare landscape
third, final state
with some touches of pen and ink and grey wash
trimmed to or just outside the platemark
generally in good condition
Plate & Sheet 66 x 174 mm.
来源
Unidentified, stamped star or flower (not in Lugt).
Josef Camesina de Pomal (1765-1827), Vienna (Lugt 429, dated 1812).
Samuel Graf von Festetits (1806-1862), Vienna (Lugt 926, dated 1847).
Joseph Daniel Böhm (1794-1865), Vienna (Lugt 271, 272 and 1442).
Ambroise Firmin-Didot (1790-1876), Paris (Lugt 119); his posthumous sale, Danlos fils & Delisle et G. Pawlowski, Paris, 16 April -12 May 1877, lot 968 ('Second état. - Superbe épreuve, chargées de barbes. Extrêmement rare de cette qualité. Collections Camesina, Festetits and Böhm.'). (Fr. 1720; to Schlösser).
Carl Schlösser (1827-1884), Elberfeld (Lugt 636); his sale, F. A. C. Prestel, Frankfurt, 7 June 1880 (and following days), lot 566 (Mk. 1,200; this impression cited in Lugt).
August Artaria (1807-1893), Vienna (Lugt 90; in pen and ink, probably redrawn).
Albert William Scholle (1860-1917), San Francisco and New-York (Lugt 2923a); probably sold through Harlow & Co., New York).
With August Laube Kunsthandel, Zurich.
Sam Josefowitz (Lugt 6094); acquired from the above in 2007; then by descent to the present owners.
出版
Bartsch, Hollstein 213; Hind 242; New Hollstein 255

荣誉呈献

Tim Schmelcher
Tim Schmelcher International Specialist

拍品专文

In the early 1650's Rembrandt increasingly began to use drypoint for integral parts of his compositions, in particular in his landscapes, of which the View of the Diemerdijk with a Milkman and Cottages is a fine example. White describes it as ‘one of the most perfect representations of the scenery around Amsterdam' (White, 1999, p. 236).
While in earlier prints, Rembrandt had only added some accents in drypoint to what were essentially complete, etched compositions, the present print marks a technical development by successfully integrating extensive drypoint work into an etched structure, something he had struggled to achieve hitherto.
Incidentally, the little figure walking with two buckets along the dyke has been identified not as a milkman but a fisherman, returning with a catch of herring, a sight Rembrandt would have encountered on his walks around the city. This view, like several others in a wide horizontal format so perfectly fitted for the flat landscapes of central Holland, is however not depicting any specific location. It is an idealized scenery that combines the wide open river terrain with intimate domestic architecture, and here ‘for the first time in his prints Rembrandt obtains a perfect harmony between the two elements’. (White, ibid.)

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