HomeExhibitions – Rembrandt and Jan Six. The Etching and the Friendship.

Rembrandt and Jan Six. The Etching and the Friendship.

Rembrandt en Jan Six

 

From 6 May to 3 September 2017 the Rembrandt House Museum presents Rembrandt and Jan Six: The Etching and the Friendship. 

The friendship between Jan Six and Rembrandt van Rijn is the subject of one of the most famous stories from the seventeenth century. This bond is expressed in an intimate portrait of Jan reading by a window, which soon proved a highlight in Rembrandt’s graphic oeuvre. The exhibition examines a friendship at the height of the seventeenth century and the sublime skill manifest in the etching. The exhibition also sheds light on the fascination surrounding the etching, the client and the artist in the centuries that followed. Jan Six and his friendship with Rembrandt in Amsterdam has come alive more than ever since the publication of the book ‘De levens van Jan Six’ (The Lives of Jan Six) written by Geert Mak, which captured the imagination of half of the reading public of the Netherlands. The Rembrandt House is joining in with a small exhibition.

Rembrandt van Rijn, Jan Six, 1647, etching, The Rembrandt House Museum

The Rembrandt House Museum is Rembrandt’s former home and workplace, where the etching of Jan Six was made. It gives visitors a unique and relevant context for the exhibition, with loans from the Six Collection. There could be no better setting.

Rembrandt made illustrations for Jan Six’s friends’ book and his stage play, but the etched portrait is the finest example of their association. A relaxed Jan leans on the window-ledge and reads a magazine. Could it perhaps be Jan’s own house while Rembrandt was paying a visit? In any event, the 1647 etching displays the consummate skill of a successful artist, who perfectly captured the atmosphere and character of the moment. At the same time it evokes a seventeenth-century world that suddenly seems very close. This etching derives its extraordinary character from the various preliminary studies, states and etching plate, and from the many curious imitations in the Netherlands and abroad.

 
On the left: Rembrandt van Rijn, Jan Six, 1647, etching, The Rembrandt House Museum
On the right: Rembrandt van Rijn, Self-portrait, etching, 1648, etching, The Rembrandt House Museum
 
On the left: Nicolaas Pieneman, Rembrandt in his workshop 1852, Amsterdam Museum
On the right: Thomas Worlidge, Edward Astley as Jan Six, 1762, Private collection

Jan Six died in 1700 and left a legacy that reflected both his artistic and his administrative qualities: as a writer and as a burgomaster. From that moment on, artists and collectors have been fascinated by the image of the nonchalant young man in an interior, and artists felt a compulsion to romanticize the two in paintings. The friendship continues to inspire imagination—always thanks to Rembrandt’s universal and timeless etching.

The exhibition presents works from the Six Collection and loans from the Rijksmuseum and the Amsterdam Museum.

The exhibition was compiled by guest curator Menno Jonker. A publication with contributions by Nikki den Dekker, Erik Hinterding, Menno Jonker, Rudie van Leeuwen, Volker Manuth, Lilian Ruhe, Jan Six and Marieke de Winkel is being produced to coincide with Rembrandt and Jan Six: The Etching and the Friendship.

Information: Anita Soer at a.soer@rembrandthuis.nl | T +31 (0)20 520 04 09 | M: +31(0)6 24 61 72 52

Photographs: http://www.rembrandthuis.nl/wp-content/uploads/rembrandt_jansix.zip

Venue: The Rembrandt House Museum, Jodenbreestraat 4, 1011 NK Amsterdam | Opening times: Daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Website: www.rembrandthuis.nl

The Rembrandt House Museum Amsterdam

Between 1639 and 1658. Rembrandt lived and worked in this magnificent house, which is now a museum. Based on an inventory from that time the house was refurbished with furniture, art and objects from the seventeenth century. There are daily etching and paint demonstrations in the Rembrandt House that show how the artist worked. The Rembrandt House owns the almost complete collection of Rembrandt’s etchings. Temporary exhibitions of work by Rembrandt, his contemporaries and later artists are staged regularly in the modern museum wing.

The Rembrandt House Museum receives a substantial financial contribution from Amsterdam City Council

Schrijf je in voor de nieuwsbrief

Subscribe to newsletter
Paint
Skip to content