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In his surreal vision of Saskia, Hendrickje or any other of Rembrandt's women, striding across the icy wastes of Canada and Greenland, putting the local polar bears to flight, Haydon was alone in ...
The death of loved ones and poverty battered Rembrandt’s spirit—but not his creativity. ... Saskia, and three of their children, he became insolvent. Then, in 1663, his mistress, Hendrickje ...
♪♪ Some of Rembrandt's loveliest paintings, warm with intimacy and sensual anticipation, came from looking at Hendrickje. At the same time, he understood how ambiguous that looking could be.
A scholarly yet broadly accessible illustrated lecture by British auteur Peter Greenaway, "Rembrandt's J'Accuse" is an enthralling docudrama that examines the Dutch master's most famous painting ...
The great Dutchman, Rembrandt, lived in Amsterdam most of his life, put into his greatest pictures the faces of Amsterdam’s burghers, surgeons, soldiers. Last week in Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum ...
Rembrandt's “Portrait of the Artist” (ca. 1663–65) from Kenwood House, London, just landed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for a seven-week run. ... His mistress, Hendrickje Stoffels, ...
In 1663 Hendrickje died, and in 1668 Rembrandt's son Titus died. The following year, Rembrandt died, leaving behind only one daughter, 650 paintings, 280 etchings, and 1,400 drawings.
A brilliant show of the 17th-century Dutch painter’s later works has opened at London’s National Gallery. The beautiful pictures may partially dispel what an awful man Rembrandt seemed to be.
For 300 years, scholars have been mixing up the works of Rembrandt van Rijn with those of his more than 50 pupils. ... by Rembrandt, of his mistress Hendrickje Stoffels," Hendrix says.
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