Rembrandt
Harmenszoon van Rijn was born on 15th July, 1606, in Leiden,
the eighth of nine children of Harmen Gerritszoon van Rijn and his wife,
Neeltje van Suijttbroeck. He was the first and the only of their sons
whom they sent to the school for Latin. After seven years' schooling
(1613-1620), Rembrandt entered the Philosophical Faculty of Leiden
University to study Classics. A short period at the university finished
with starting a period of apprenticeship (1622-24) under the
Italy-trained painter Jacob Isaacszoon van Swanenburgh. However, the
succeeding half-year studies under Pieter Lastman, the Amsterdam artist
of historical paintings, influenced Rembrandt's work much deeper.
In 1625 the
19-year-old
Rembrandt returned to Leiden and opened his own studio,
which he shared with his friend of the same age, Jan Lievens. Rembrandt
executed historical paintings, initially following Lastman's models:
Tobit and Anna
(1626), The Ass of
Balaam Talking before the Angel.
(1626). His physiognomic studies, resulted in
numerous self-portraits:
Self-Portrait.
(c. 1629), Self-Portrait with Wide-Open Eyes. (1630). During his
lifetime Rembrandt executed more than 100 self-portraits. He also
produced many engravings and etchings.
The turning point in
Rembrandt's
further career was the visit to Leiden of Constantijn Huygens, the
widely educated secretary of the governor Prince Frederick Hendrick, who
developed great interest in Rembrandt and his art. Huygens' patronage
led to commissions and initial success: two works by Rembrandt were
purchased by the English Crown and many copies of his painting Judas
Returning the Thirty Pieces of Silver and the
Raising of Lazarus
were soon published.
After his father's death on 27th
April 1630, Rembrandt moved to Amsterdam, where he settled in the house
of the art-dealer, Hendrick van Uylenburgh. Prince Frederick Hendrick
bought a number of his paintings and commissioned the Passion cycle,
which he would finish in 1639. In 1632, Rembrandt also received the
commission to paint a portrait of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp, the famous
Amsterdam surgeon. Wining acclaim with this work, Rembrandt became a
fashionable portraitist in Amsterdam and started to receive many
commissions for portraits of well-to-do patricians. One of his favorite
themes, the meditating Philosopher, appeared in his work as early as
about 1633. The Prophet
Jeremiah Mourning over the Destruction of Jerusalem.
(1630): Rembrandt has used the blunt end of his brush to scratch details
of the foliage, Jeremiah's beard and the fastenings of his tunic in the
wet paint, a characteristic technique of his early years.
In 1634, Rembrandt became a
member of the Guild of St. Luke, in order that he may train pupils and
apprentices as a self-employed master. Rembrandt was popular as a
teacher and had a very large and profitable workshop with many student
followers, including such outstanding painters as Gerard Dou,
Aert de Gelder,
Carel Fabritius,
Philips Konink,
Ferdinand Bol,
Govert Flinck and
Nicolaes Maes.
The same year he married Saskia
van Uylenburgh, niece of his art-dealer and daughter of a wealthy
patrician. Despite their deep devotion and love to each other, their
happiness was overshadowed with the deaths of their new-born children
and quarrels with Saskia's relatives, who accused her of squandering
money. Of their 4 children only their son Titus, born in September 1641,
survived to his adulthood. Titus' features appear in a number of
painting by Rembrandt:
The Artist's Son Titus at His Desk.
(1655),
Titus.
(c.1658).
As if in plea to let her son
live, Saskia died the next year in June. Her death caused a deep crisis
in Rembrandt's life. During the years of their mutual life
Rembrandt created such masterpieces as
The Abduction of Ganymede.
(1635),
The Angel Stopping Abraham from Sacrificing Isaac
to God. (1635),
The Feast of Belshazzar.
(c. 1635),
The Blinding of Samson.
(1636), Danae.
(1636), The Prodigal Son
in the Tavern (Rembrandt and Saskia).
(c. 1635),
The Night Watch
(1642) and others. The Night Watch, maybe is the most famous Rembrandt's
work, and his the largest one (12x15ft; 3.5x4.5m), was commissioned by a
company of the Civil Guard of Amsterdam for its assembly hall. The
painting is a 'recapitulation of the ideals of Rembrandt's first ten
Amsterdam years, and is the last painting in which he strives for
brilliant external effects. From now on he set himself the aim of
recreating in visual terms the intangible essence of man, his inner
life'. In his last two decades Rembrandt simplified his compositions,
preferring more classical and stable structure.
To help the widowed father, two
women, Geertge Dircx and, a little later, Hendrickje Stoffels, were
admitted in the household. Eventually Geertge caused the artist
troubles: at first she repeatedly quarreled with him until at last she
brought him to the court (in 1649) on the grounds of an unfulfilled
promise of marriage. The second woman, Hendrickje, testified against the
plaintiff, and Geertge was sentenced to several years in the prison at
Gouda. Hendrickje became Rembrandt's common-law wife, she sat for many
of Rembrandt's paintings, such as
Portrait of Hendrickje Stoffels.
(c. 1650) and in 1654 gave birth to their daughter
Cornelia.
Despite numerous commissions,
the fees from pupils and the proceeds from etchings, Rembrandt's debts
continued to grow. In 1656, Rembrandt was declared bankrupt. His house
and collections were auctioned; however, the sum thereby raised was
insufficient to cover the debts. The artist moved into the Roozengracht,
where he led a secluded life along with Mennonite and Jewish friends.
Titus' guardian, Louys Crayers, after a long court case, succeeded in
having the boy's part of the inheritance returned to him from his
bankrupt father's estate.
After Rembrandt's bankruptcy,
Hendrickje and Titus (in 1660) set up an art-dealing business in order
to provide Rembrandt with protection against his creditors. Despite
leading a secluded existence, he maintained many contacts. He continued
to keep pupils, and execute commissions, such as the portrait of the
board members of the Amsterdam Cloth makers' Guild
The Syndics of the Clothmakers'
Guild (The Staalmeesters).
(1662); painting of Alexander the Great and a
portrait of
Homer.
(1663). He trained Titus as a painter but hardly any trace of his
artistic activities survived. After Hendrichje's death in 1663 Titus
continued the art-dealing business. The paintings of Rembrandt's last
years bear the sad imprint of his unhappy old age and disrepute
The Return of the
Prodigal Son.
(c 1668/69). The dramatic expressions in his last
magnificent series of self-portraits reveal an overwhelming ultimate
misery and inner torment
Self-Portrait.
(1669). In 1668, Titus married Magdalena van Loo, but
unexpectedly died half a year later. One year, which remained for him to
live, Rembrandt spent at the house of his daughter-in-law. He became
godfather to his granddaughter on 22nd March, 1669. The artist died on
4th October, 1669 without having completed the painting
Simeon with the Christ Child in
the Temple.