Rembrandt like many artists, lived paycheck to paycheck…except he enjoyed very large paychecks! Today’s poem, by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, stars the god Pan.
The date is July 15th, Monday, and today I’m traveling from Bend, Oregon to Portland, Oregon in the USA.
Today is the birthday of Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn, Dutch artist. He is considered the most important artist in Dutch history, and one of the great visual artists in art history.
Born in 1606 in the Dutch Republic, now the Netherlands, Rembrandt was the ninth child of a miller father and baker mother. Rembrandt dropped out of secondary school at the age of 14 to become the apprentice to a painter in Leiden.
Rembrandt studied painting for three years as an apprentice, following it up with a short six-month apprenticeship in Amsterdam. Unlike most of his artist peers who further honed their artistic skills by studying in Italy, Rembrandt never left the Netherlands.
By the tender age of 18, Rembrandt set up a studio in his hometown of Leiden, refining his art while teaching other artists. His break came when his paintings caught the eye of a statesman. The statesmen began setting Rembrandt up with commissions from the Dutch Imperial Court, the Hauge. With this, Rembrandt was able to move to Amsterdam, a booming bustling city.
From there Rembrandt’s reputation grew, and so did his income. Although Rembrandt saw financial success with his paintings and etchings, he still lived paycheck to paycheck. He just had very large paychecks. He enjoyed spending money on collecting art and rarities, and the home he and his wife had bought had a big mortgage attached to it. Toward the end of his life he would have to sell most of his collections and move to a smaller home to repay a few of his large debts.
During his lifetime Rembrandt became revered in Europe as a great artist, not through his paintings, but through his etchings. Rembrandt’s preferred etching method was a simple etching needle and copper plates. He could etch one copper plate and make multiple prints from it. They were less expensive and physically smaller than his paintings, allowing for wider circulation throughout the continent.
Given the difficult task that etching is, the detail and alertness captured in Rembrandt’s etching, speak to his skill and reputation as art history’s greatest etcher.
A Musical Instrument
Elizabeth Barrett Browning