Main content
Europe 1300 - 1800
Course: Europe 1300 - 1800 > Unit 9
Lesson 4: Dutch Republic- Model of the Dutch East India Company ship "Valkenisse"
- The Dutch art market in the 17th century
- Why make a self portrait?
- A Dutch doll house
- Van Mander, Het Schilder-Boeck
- Frederiks Andries, Covered coconut cup
- Osias Beert, Still Life with Various Vessels on a Table
- Anthony van Dyck, Self-Portrait as Icarus with Daedalus
- Saenredam, Interior of Saint Bavo, Haarlem
- Hals, Singing Boy with Flute
- Hals, Malle Babbe
- Frans Hals, The Women Regents
- Willem Claesz. Heda, Still Life with Glasses and Tobacco
- Rembrandt, The Artist in His Studio
- Rembrandt, The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp
- Rembrandt, The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp
- Rembrandt, The Night Watch
- Rembrandt, The Night Watch
- Rembrandt, Self-Portrait with Saskia
- Rembrandt, Girl at a Window
- Rembrandt, Aristotle with a Bust of Homer
- Rembrandt, Aristotle with a Bust of Homer
- Rembrandt, Christ Crucified between the Two Thieves: The Three Crosses.
- Rembrandt, Bathsheba at her Bath
- Rembrandt, Abraham Francen
- Rembrandt, Self-Portrait
- Rembrandt, Self-Portrait with Two Circles
- Rembrandt, The Jewish Bride
- Rembrandt, Christ Preaching (Hundred Guilder Print)
- Is it a genuine Rembrandt?
- Judith Leyster, The Proposition
- Judith Leyster, Self-Portrait
- Early Dutch Torah Finials
- Michaelina Wautier, The Five Senses
- Willem Kalf, Still Life with a Silver Ewer
- Gerrit Dou, A Woman Playing a Clavichord
- Vermeer, The Glass of Wine
- Vermeer, Young Woman with a Water Pitcher
- Johannes Vermeer, Woman Holding a Balance
- Vermeer, Woman Holding a Balance
- Johannes Vermeer, Girl with a Pearl Earring
- Johannes Vermeer, The Art of Painting
- Jan Steen, Feast of St. Nicholas
- Ruisdael, View of Haarlem with Bleaching Grounds
- Jacob van Ruisdael, The Jewish Cemetery
- Andries Beeckman, The Castle of Batavia and Dutch colonialism
- Frans Post, Landscape with Ruins in Olinda
- Rachel Ruysch, Fruit and Insects
- Ruysch, Flower Still-Life
- Van Huysum, Vase with Flowers
- Conserving van Walscapelle's Flowers in a Glass Vase
- The Great Atlas, Dutch edition
- The Town Hall of Amsterdam
- Huis ten Bosch (House in the Woods)
- 17th century Delftware
- Baroque art in Holland
© 2023 Khan AcademyTerms of usePrivacy PolicyCookie Notice
Rembrandt, The Artist in His Studio
Rembrandt, The Artist in His Studio, c. 1628. oil on panel, 24.8 x 31.7 cm (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
speakers: Dr. Christopher Atkins, Van Otterloo-Weatherbie Director of the Center for Netherlandish Art and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
speakers: Dr. Christopher Atkins, Van Otterloo-Weatherbie Director of the Center for Netherlandish Art and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
Video transcript
(smooth jazz music) - [Beth] We're in the Museum
of Fine Arts in Boston, and we're in front of a small painting by the great Dutch painter, Rembrandt, "The Artist in His Studio." And here we see an artist
holding the tools of his craft and looking at his painting. This is a subject that has a long history, but this painting comes at the
beginning of that tradition. - [Christopher] There
aren't that many images that predate this one of
the artists in the studio or the artist at work. - [Beth] In later depictions, the artist is right in front
of the panel or the canvas that he's painting. And here, the artist is standing back and looking at what he's painting. - [Christopher] Not only is
the artist not applying brush to canvas or panel, but
he's standing at a remove. - [Beth] There's a sense
that he's reflecting. He's thinking about what he's painting and thinking about the next steps, but it's all intensely frustrating for us. I really want to see what he's painting. - [Christopher] Rembrandt
has decided to show us the back of the easel, which makes, I think, this
painting a larger exploration of painting in the
broadest possible sense. - [Beth] Sometimes in his
pictures of the artist in his studio, we get other accessories that flesh out the story
about what the artist is doing or how the artist sees himself. But here, Rembrandt's reduced
everything to just the artist, the back of the panel that he's painting, this very bare studio and some
of the tools of the artist. - [Christopher] He's really
stripped down the scene. He's restricted the color
palette, the accessories, to really hone in on the
back of the painting, the artist and the sense of
a three-dimensional space in which both exist. - [Beth] This bright light
on the space between them activates that space as
the space of thought, of contemplation. - [Christopher] The space
between is really powerful. And it often is in the history of art. Like Michelangelo's God
reaching out to Adam. - [Beth] But you get a sense
of the absorption in the world that he's creating on this
panel that we can't see. His eyes are so large and
draw our attention to him. - [Christopher] Rembrandt
placed the hat farther back on the head so we can see the face. At the same time, his head
and forehead is in shadow, which is a traditional means
of communicating thought. - [Beth] So what does it mean
to be painting a painter, standing back from his painting and not painting, but thinking? And is Rembrandt here
creating a kind of treatise about what it means to be an artist and what it means to paint? - [Christopher] He's making an argument that painting is an intellectual endeavor. - [Beth] That was an
argument that had to be made because, coming out of
the medieval tradition, artists were thought of
more as specially talented crafts people because they
make things with their hands. There was a division between
that and intellectual work. - [Christopher] Artists
were members of a guild, much like other crafts professions because they made things with their hands. - [Beth] So he's making an argument that the artist should
be of that higher status than a craftsman or someone
who works with their hands. - [Christopher] Unlike
other studio scenes, where you might see an antique sculpture, the bust of a philosopher or books open, he's restricted it. That step back is the
only means of expressing that this is an intellectual pursuit. - [Beth] It feels as though
part of what Rembrandt is saying here in this
treatise on painting, if we want to think about it that way, is that the artist can
conceive a world entirely from his imagination. And it's important to
remember that this was painted when he was just 22. - [Christopher] Which
is a remarkable thing that he was bold enough
to create such a statement related to his profession at the earliest stages of his career. - [Beth] He was born in Leiden. He went to Latin school
and went on briefly to the university, but he's only really practiced in Leiden. He hasn't yet gone to Amsterdam. He isn't really the
Rembrandt that we know yet. - [Christopher] He's not Rembrandt, he is Rembrandt Harmenszoon Von Rijn. He hasn't gone by the single
name in the great tradition of Italian masters, of
Michelangelo and Titian. But even still, he is formulating an image of where he wants to be or
what he wants painting to be. - [Beth] So let's talk
about the painting formally for a moment. We have on the right
side, that wooden doorway, where we would get a
real sense of the wood and how that door was built,
but that's all in shadow. And then the next quarter
is also largely in shadow, that back of the panel and
that beautiful silvery line, that forms the edge. - [Christopher] It's
one of several moments within the painting, which
are just virtuoso displays of what Rembrandt could do with paint. The floorboards at the bottom
corner, you get the texture, you get the craggy lines
of irregular cuts of wood. You've got the knots and the
whirls at the edge of the door where the paint or the
plaster has cracked, and you can see the structure beneath. All of these are opportunities
for Rembrandt to show off his technical virtuosity. - [Beth] In the 17th century in Holland, people were really interested in artists and how they worked. - [Christopher] There were a lot of people who were interested in
pictures and paintings, engravings and etchings, and by extension, they became really
interested in the people who made those things, and they became figures they
wanted to know more about, the conditions in which
they created these things and their working process. - [Beth] It's important to
remember that in some ways, this is when the popularity of painting as an art form takes off, in these early decades
of the 17th century. In Holland, everyone bought paintings. - [Christopher] We have tales of visitors writing back to other locations
about how they were amazed how many paintings an individual had. It was a hyper visual culture. And in that way not that
different from our own, perhaps. - [Beth] So this is this rare moment when we get to see a young Rembrandt reflecting on what it
means to be an artist. (smooth jazz music)