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Portrait Jan Six
Of the many portraits that Rembrandt painted, etched and drew, those of
Jan Six (1618-1700) are among the best known. The portrait of Six
painted in 1654 still belongs to the Six family. In 1647 Rembrandt made
the portrait etching shown here. It is one of the few etchings for
which Rembrandt made several preliminary drawings. Six leans casually
by the window, reading a manuscript. As a contemporary ode to this
portrait reveals, Six is depicted in his ‘book room’.
Jan Six’s
family was active in trade and owned a silk dyeing works. He himself
worked in the family business until the early 1650s. However, Six also
devoted himself to the arts. He wrote poems and collected art. In the
print he presents himself as an art-lover. Some years after this
portrait was made, Jan Six married Margaretha Tulp. She was the
daughter of Nicolaes Tulp, the protagonist of Rembrandt’s earliest
Anatomy Lesson. In part as a result of his marriage, Jan Six rose up
the social ladder. In 1691 he became burgomaster of Amsterdam.
Rembrandt van Rijn, Portrait of Jan Six,
signed and dated ‘Rembrandt f. 1647’,
etching, drypoint and burin, 24.4 x 19.1 cm , Amsterdam, Museum het
Rembrandthuis (B.285 IV)