Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-69)
Born in Leiden, Holland in 1606, Rembrandt studied with Jacob
Isaacsz van Swanenburgh (1571-1638) and Pieter Lastman (1583-1633).
By 1626 he was an independent painter, working in Leiden alongside
Jan Lievens (1607-74), another pupil of Lastman.
In 1631 Rembrandt moved to Amsterdam where he painted portraits
of wealthy merchants. Three years later, he married his first wife,
Saskia, and by the end of the 1630s he had moved into a substantial
house (now the Rembrandt House Museum). In 1642, the year Rembrandt
completed The Nightwatch (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam), Saskia
died.
By 1649, Hendrikje Stoffels had become his housekeeper and
partner. Both Saskia and Hendrikje Stoffels posed for many
paintings and sketches, often appearing as Susannah, Diana, Flora,
Artemisa and other classical or Biblical figures. Rembrandt,
however, was plagued by financial trouble and in 1656 his assets
were made over to the courts, and many were sold. With his wife and
son in financial control, Rembrandt continued to paint. Hendrikje
died in 1663, his son Titus in 1668 and Rembrandt himself in
1669.
In his drawings, etchings and paintings, Rembrandt treated every
subject: histories, landscapes, portraits, self-portraits, everyday
scenes or sketches from nature. Rembrandt's biographer, Cornelis de
Bie, praised his paintings, 'which enlighten every mind', and his
etchings which are 'the very soul of life that lives therein'.
The British Museum's collection of over eighty of Rembrandt's
drawings has examples from every period of the his career.
Rembrandt also experimented in both etching and drypoint, producing
some 300 prints altogether, of which the Museum has the world's
richest collection.