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HUNT FOR REMBRANDT FORGERIES

Cet article se compose de 12 pages.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
While the bailiffs moved round the house, Rembrandt shouted at them:
“mind their papers, these are rare prints by Dürer. Mind this marble sculpture ! It's a work by Michelangelo !”. When they touched a painting resting on an easel, he shouted : “you cannot take this work! It's not my property as it has been already paid by my client”.

But the four men did not listen to him and seized everything in his house leaving him a poor man. Rembrandt had however had a great start in Leyden, his native town, before moving to Amsterdam where he married Saskia and became a famous portrait painter.

The young artist went on to collect magnificent works of art and paintings as well as rare fabrics and jewels. He notably showed himself wearing a heavy gold chain in a portrait now in the Louvre Museum, wearing an armour (Berlin, Florence and the Hague museums) or a plumed hat (Museum of Dresden) and even an helmet (Museum of Kassel).

Rembrandt was the only artist who showed himself in so many self-portraits, as a young man and later as a tired man. His many self-portraits are thus like a film of his life or like mirrors of his situations.

The National Gallery will offer 100 different faces of Rembrandt, paintings, drawings and engravings, to its visitors who will have the opportunity of experiencing a rare moment.


"The Anatomy Lecture of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp"
The Hague, Mauritshuis

These self-portraits are the greatest elements enabling us to retrace Rembrandt's biography. In 1642, after eight years of a happy marriage, Saskia died leaving a eight months son named Titus in Rembrandt's care. Much affected by the disappearance of his wife, the artist tried to overcome his grief in his arms of the baby's nurse.

The latter became his mistress but went on to sue him before a court after he refused to marry her but in the meantime Rembrandt had found some happiness with a young servant named Hendrickje Stoffels.

His relationship with Hendrickje was mainly the cause of his disgrace and ensuing bankruptcy. At the same time Rembrandt faced harsh criticisms regarding his painting The Watch Patrol and then preferred to live as lonely man.

From then on he worked freely and produced some great masterpieces, including self-portraits and extraordinary paintings like the Jewish Fiancée and the Members of the Drapers' Association. His last self-portraits were those of a fat and aged man who seemed incredibly human casting a glance full of compassion at our world.

On seeing these self-portraits, Van Gogh once said that there were no words to express what Rembrandt had tried to say.

Now, the most urgent tasks for experts is to determine the exact number of genuine Rembrandt works. The Man with a gilt helmet, a painting regarded as one of his most famous, was rejected a few years ago.

Also withdrawn from the list of genuine were the Polish horseman, in the Frick Collection, The Man with a red bonnet in the Museum of Rotterdam, The rest during the flight into Egypt in the Mauritshuis Museum of the Hague, the portrait of Cornelia Pronck in the Louve Museum, the Good Samaritan in the Wallace Collection in London as well as the portrait of the artist's mother in the collection of the Queen of England.

It is true that there were many copies or forgeries of Rembrandt works, notwithstanding the fact that the artist had many pupils who adopted his style. During the 19th Century, many art historians easily mistook his works with those of his pupils and followers. Now with modern research techniques, the colour pigments he used have been analysed, his brush strokes have been scanned and his touch deciphered. All possible chemical or technical means, X-rays, ultra-violet, grazing surface light, pigment components and others have been used to track down forgeries and copies.

It is also true that some unknown works by Rembrandt still remain to be discovered. It happens from time to time that a lost work emerges again though several paintings are being declassified by the scrupulous Rembrandt Research project group.

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