Descent from the Cross by Torchlight
Primary
Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn
(Leiden, The Netherlands, 1606–Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 1669)
NationalityDutch, Europe
Date1654
MediumEtching and drypoint on heavy Japanese paper
DimensionsSheet: 8 1/8 × 6 7/16 in. (20.7 × 16.3 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, Purchase in honor of Jonathan Bober's tenth anniversary as Curator of Prints and Drawings through the generosity of David Armstrong, Carolyn Bullard, Dr. and Mrs. Paul Burns, George and Jo Anne Christian, Marian Davis, Susan Garwood, M.K. Hage, Jr., Helen Lea, John A. Robertson, Helmut and Petra Rumbler, Susan Thomas, Elgin W. Ware, Jr., Gerturde Weber, Stephen and Julia Wilkinson, Dave and Reba Williams, an anonymous donor, and members of the Print Study Group, 1998.72
Keywords
Rights Statement
Collection AreaPrints and Drawings
Object number1998.72
On View
Not on viewCollection Highlight
Iconographically unprecedented, this print combines a traditional Deposition with the Lamentation as it prefigures the Entombment. Unparalleled in its evocation of the tragedy of these events, it eliminates any rhetoric, indeed suppresses any obvious reactions and even obscures the ostensible focus, Christ's slack body. Instead, an original and universally affecting mood is set by the overwhelming shadow, the glow of a single torch, and the tenderness of a humble cast. The print is one of Rembrandt's greatest achievements as a printmaker. This impression is printed on the warm toned and absorbent Japanese paper that the artist favored for the first pulls of his late prints. It is exceptionally rich with ink from both the fugitive work in drypoint and the film of ink left across most of the plate by a deliberately incomplete wiping. This impression is also in extraordinary condition, with no disturbance of the surface or scuffing in the shadows. With a second, later 17th-century printing on standard antique laid paper (acquired in 1961), it also forms the most telling comparison of impressions in the entire collection.
Exhibitions
Reproduction after Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn
1631