A Descriptive Catalogue of the Works of Rembrandt: And of His Scholars, Bol, Livens, and Van Vliet, Compiled from the Original Etchings, and from the Catalogues of De Burgy, Gersaint, Helle and Glomy, Marcus, and Yver |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 64
Page 3
... likewise one of the most rare of Rembrandt's portraits . 21 % - 210 6. A SMALL HEAD STOOPING , SOMEWHAT RESEM- BLING REMBRANDT . This head is uncovered , and seen nearly in front ; the visage is round , the hair shocky and frizled , the ...
... likewise one of the most rare of Rembrandt's portraits . 21 % - 210 6. A SMALL HEAD STOOPING , SOMEWHAT RESEM- BLING REMBRANDT . This head is uncovered , and seen nearly in front ; the visage is round , the hair shocky and frizled , the ...
Page 8
... likewise falls strong on the body between his left shoulder and breast . The hair is thick and frizled . This print is extremely rare . 230 2 A SMALL PORTRAIT OF REMBRANDT IN A CAP AND FUR CLOAK . It is said to be a three - quarters ...
... likewise falls strong on the body between his left shoulder and breast . The hair is thick and frizled . This print is extremely rare . 230 2 A SMALL PORTRAIT OF REMBRANDT IN A CAP AND FUR CLOAK . It is said to be a three - quarters ...
Page 11
... likewise less finished , but is the same size as the third impression , which is already described . 23 A PORTRAIT OF REMBRANDT , WITH A DRAWN SABRE . This piece is extremely well executed . He is seen in front with a richly ornamented ...
... likewise less finished , but is the same size as the third impression , which is already described . 23 A PORTRAIT OF REMBRANDT , WITH A DRAWN SABRE . This piece is extremely well executed . He is seen in front with a richly ornamented ...
Page 13
... likewise is wanting . The second impression is very scarce . The landscape is still wanting . The inside of the casement is less shaded than in the finished print . The habit , book , papers , covering of the table , and the hands , are ...
... likewise is wanting . The second impression is very scarce . The landscape is still wanting . The inside of the casement is less shaded than in the finished print . The habit , book , papers , covering of the table , and the hands , are ...
Page 18
... likewise the 6 . 610-51 % Of this there is a copy reversed , without Rembrandt's name , or the date , apparently by the same person who copied the last print ; they are both of them well executed , but possess not the spirit of the ...
... likewise the 6 . 610-51 % Of this there is a copy reversed , without Rembrandt's name , or the date , apparently by the same person who copied the last print ; they are both of them well executed , but possess not the spirit of the ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appears aqua fortis arched back-ground is shaded back-ground is white beard BEGGAR bottom is written breast Burgomaster Bust calotte catalogue cloak collection cottage curtain Dutch barn effect elbow chair engraved extremely rare face feather FERDINAND BOL figure fourth impression frizled fur cap Gersaint ground hair half-length hangs head is covered highly finished holds Indian ink J. G. V. Vliet Jesus Joseph Joseph of Arimathea King of France knee kneeling landscape leaning left hand left side LEONARD BRAMER less wrought light comes lightly etched likewise mezetin cap mezzotinto middle moustaches nearly in front neck old woman piece is etched piece is executed plate Portrait of Rembrandt racter Rembrandt f rests right corner right hand right side SAINT JEROME second impression seen in front seen in profile seen nearly shadowed single stroke sitting sketched stands stile third impression three impressions virgin wears written Rembrandt written Rt Yver
Popular passages
Page 23 - ... and bring him on horseback through the street of the city, and proclaim before him, Thus shall it be done to the man whom the king delighteth to honour.
Page 22 - For, behold, we were binding sheaves in the field, and, lo, my sheaf arose, and also stood upright ; and, behold, your sheaves stood round about, and made obeisance to my sheaf.
Page 82 - ... populace, that on the expulsion of the Spaniards in the year 1577, they overturned it into the court, and converted it to its former purpose, by casting it again into cannon. On the pedestal was a fulsome eulogium on himself. • At the foot of a large pedestal lies a colossal figure of a man, admirably foreshortened, his head lying at the bottom of the print, and his feet elevated above the body, so as to reach the bottom of the tablet on the pedestal. At each corner of the pedestal is a mask...
Page xvi - Coppenol with a white back-ground ; the Joseph with the face unshaded, and the good Samaritan, with the horse's tail white, which are regarded as inestimable ; whilst the same subjects, without these distinctions, are considered as of little comparative value.
Page 51 - Guelder," was so called because he refused to sell an impression of it under that price. Of this print we may remark that it is generally esteemed the chef d'aeuvre of Rembrandt, being highly finished, the characters full of expression, and the effect of the chiaroscuro very fine. Gilpin mentions twenty guineas, as the price of a good impression of this print ; Mr. Daulby thirty, to which twenty more, we are assured, must now be added. Captain Baillie purchased the plate in Holland, and retouched...
Page xvii - ... obliterating, or working on them again, enabled him to provide sufficient amusement for his admirers ; and hence varieties frequently occur which are not easily explicable. He is even said to have frequently suffered himself to be solicited before he would consent to dispose of them ; and it is a well-attested fact, that the print of
Page xiii - ... age; yet, at a proper distance, the whole has an astonishing effect, and every portrait appears as if starting from the canvass. Thus, a picture of his maid-servant, placed at the window of his house at Amsterdam, is said to have deceived the passengers for several days.
Page 177 - M. Gersaint relates, that in one of his journeys to Holland, he happened to be at Amsterdam when Six's cabinet was selling. It consisted of a large collection of prints, and some paintings by the best masters. He purchased several prints, and among others, three or four portraits of the owner, for as there were twenty-five of them, they sold for no more than from 15 to iSforins each.
Page 171 - He holds a a pen in his right hand, which rests on a large accountbook, that lies open on a desk standing on a table covered with a richly flowered cloth, fringed at the bottom, on which are several bags of money. He is delivering a bag to a man, who is kneeling on his left knee, and appears to be receiving it in order to pack it in a cask that stands before him, with the head ofF. Two other casks lie on their sides, with a mallet and driver lying upon one of them. On the left side is a large iron...
Page ii - ... at a village near Leyden, in 1606. The real name of his family was GERRETSZ, but from having resided early in life at a village upon the banks of the Rhine, he obtained that of VAN RYN. Of his personal history we have very few particulars. His father was a miller. After an unsuccessful attempt to avail himself of the advantages of a college education at Leyden, he is said to have been indebted for his earliest instruction as a painter to Jacques Vanzwanenburg. He afterwards studied under Peter...