
Rembrandt · CC0
Donna con un garofano
Dettagli
La storia
By the early 1660s Rembrandt had been through bankruptcy and the forced sale of his house and collection, and he was painting with a loose, heavily worked surface that some contemporaries found unfinished. This woman holds a pink, a carnation that stood for love and marriage, and she wears clothes already old-fashioned in her own day, a deliberate nod back to an earlier century. She has a companion picture, a man with a magnifying glass, most likely her husband. The two are thought to be the Amsterdam auctioneer Pieter Haringh and his wife Elizabeth Delft. A gilt picture frame glints behind her in the gloom, yet Rembrandt saves most of his attention for the shadowed, thoughtful face.




