Rembrandt
Location
Temporary Exhibitions, Friends and Cheatham Galleries
About
Rembrandt’s mastery of the printmaking medium and his sensitive depiction of the human condition are unsurpassed. His numerous etchings covered the full range of styles and subjects for which he is celebrated as a painter and draughtsman, including self-portraits, scenes from the Bible, vignettes of everyday life, and character studies. Famously experimental, Rembrandt often reworked his copper plates to improve and extend their expressive power. The results can look startlingly modern and continue to inspire artists today. Drawing on many pictorial traditions and familiar themes, the works in the Hood’s collection represent Rembrandt’s achievements as a printmaker from his first etchings in the 1620s to his death forty years later. This exhibition is presented in celebration of the artist’s four hundredth birthday and will be accompanied by an illustrated brochure.
Exhibition Curator
T. Barton Thurber
Related Publications
Additional Information
Related Exhibitions
- The Golden Age: Seventeenth-Century Art in the Netherlands
- Envisioning Jerusalem: Prints from Dürer to Rembrandt