Rembrandt van Rijn: Doing

Rembrandt van Rijn was Dutch 17th century painter and etcher. Explore interesting quotes on doing.
Rembrandt van Rijn: 46 quotes2 likes

“I am most astonished by what has been written about the [painting] 'Alexander', which is so well done that I must suppose there are not many lovers of art [amatori] at Messina. I am also surprised that Your Lordship [Don Antonio Ruffo] should complain as much about the price as about the canvas, but if Your Lordship wishes to return it as he did the sketch [schizzo] of Homer, I will do another Alexander... If Your Lordship likes the Alexander as is, very well. If he does not want to keep it, six hundred florins remain outstanding. And for the Homer [painting] five hundred florins plus the expenses of canvas, it being understood that everything is at Your Lordship's expense. Having agreed to it, would he kindly send me his desired measurements. Awaiting the response to settle the matter.”

Rembrandt van Rijn

Quote of Rembrandt&#x27;s letter, Nov/Dec. 1662, to buyer Don Antonio Ruffo from Messina, Sicily (location: RD, 1662/12, 509); as quoted in Rembrandt&#x27;s Eyes, Simon Schama, Alfred A. Knopf, Borzoi Books, NEW YORK 1999, p. 591, &amp; notes 32-36 <br class="br">Rembrant&#x27;s reaction after complaints of Don Antonio Ruffo, dispatched through the Dutch consul in Messina, Jan van den Broeck, who was on his way to Amsterdam. Once there he was to inform Isaac Just (presumably the intermediary between Rembrandt and the Messina patrician), of the intense dissatisfaction at the work, which Don Ruffo had received. &#x27;The Alexander&#x27;, he complained, being unacceptably stitched together from four separate pieces, showed seams which were &#x27;too horrible for words.&#x27;..g with so many defects.. (Don Ruffo already bought Rembrandt&#x27;s painting Aristotle with a Bust of Homer c. 1655 and still existing: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rembrandt_-_Aristotle_with_a_Bust_of_Homer_-_WGA19232.jpg, but &#x27;The Alexander&#x27; of Rembrandt is lost). <br class="br">1640 - 1670

“The Ground of Rinebrant of Rine: Take half an ounce of Expoltum burnt of Amber, one ounce of Virgin's was, half an ounce of Mastick, then take the Mastick and Expoltum, and beat them severally very fine in a Mortar; this being done, take a new earthen pot and set upon it a charcoal-fire, then shake into it the Mastick and Expoltum by degrees, stirring the Wax about till they be thoroughly mingled, then pour it forth into fair water and make a ball of it, and use it as before mentioned, but be sure you do not heat the plate too hot when you lay the ground upon it, this is the only way of Rinebrant.”

Rembrandt van Rijn

Rembrandt&#x27;s etching recipe http://remdoc.huygens.knaw.nl/#/document/remdoc/e12885, in &#x27;The Whole Art of Drawing&#x27;, Alexander Browne, London 1660, p. 106 <br class="br">Strauss &amp;amp; Van der Meulen 1979, p. 476, RD 1660/29: &#x27;This recipe, specifically attributed to Rembrandt, for preparing the ground of a plate for etching is given by Alexander Brown in &#x27;The Whole of Drawing&#x27; <br class="br">1640 - 1670