Ritratto di Maerten Soolmans

Rembrandt or workshop · PD

Ritratto di Maerten Soolmans


Dettagli

Artista
Rembrandt
Anno
1634
Tecnica
olio su tela
Tipo
dipinto
Dimensioni
71,2 × 53 cm

La storia

Rembrandt painted this full-length in 1634 for a wedding. The groom, Marten Soolmans, was in his early twenties and heir to an Antwerp family that had fled north to Amsterdam and grown rich refining sugar, in a plant they had named Purgatory for the heat of the work. He spends that money on the canvas. He is dressed head to foot in black silk, with a wide lace collar, and enormous rosettes of lace bloom on each shoe. Full-length standing portraits like this were usually reserved for royalty, so a merchant's son having himself painted this way said a great deal. Rembrandt had just arrived in the city and was hungry for exactly these clients. The shoe rosettes alone hold more paint than some of his faces.

Ritratto di Maerten Soolmans — Rembrandt — MuseScope