
Rembrandt · PD
Ritratto di una donna di 62 anni, forse Aeltje Pietersdr Uylenburgh
Dettagli
La storia
When Rembrandt painted this in 1632, he had just left his home town of Leiden for Amsterdam, a young man of about 25 trying to break into the busy portrait trade of a booming merchant city. He lodged with the art dealer Hendrick van Uylenburgh, and commissions came through that household. The elderly woman here is thought to be Aeltje Pietersdr Uylenburgh, a relative of the dealer and a cousin of Saskia, the woman Rembrandt would marry two years later. He gives her a plain millstone collar and a steady, unsoftened face, the skin loosening with age. For a long time nobody knew who she was. Her name was only reattached to the panel in recent decades, when the picture resurfaced at auction.




