The Rembrandt House Museum is a house in the Jodenbreestraat in Amsterdam
, where Rembrandt lived and painted for a number of years. It is now an
important museum. Rembrandt purchased the house in 1639 and lived there
until he went bankrupt in 1656, when all his belongings went on auction.
The history of the Rembrandt house The house where Rembrandt lived between 1639 and 1658 is
a museum: Museum het Rembrandthuis or the Rembrandt House Museum. The
building was constructed in 1606 and 1607 in what was then known as the
Sint Anthonisbreestraat. The street did not come to be called the
Jodenbreestraat until later. The house was built on two lots in the
eastern part of the city. Many rich merchants and artists settled in
this new part of town. It is a substantial two-storey dwelling house
with a stepped gable. In about 1627-28 the house was drastically
remodelled. It was given a new façade, a triangular corniced
pediment—the height of modernity at the time—and another storey was
added. The reconstruction was probably overseen by Jacob van Campen, who
was later to make his name as the architect of Amsterdam Town Hall (now
The Dutch Royal Palace in Dam Square).
1639–1658 In 1639 Rembrandt signed a contract governing the
payment for the purchase of the house in the Breestraat. The purchase
price was thirteen thousand guilders, a huge sum, which he could not
come up with in its entirety. He was, however, allowed to pay it off in
instalments. At this time Rembrandt had already established his
reputation as an artist. In the same year he bought the house, he was
awarded the prestigious commission to paint the Night Watch. Although he
was earning a lot of money, Rembrandt was unable—or unwilling—to pay off
the mortgage. This was eventually to bring about his financial downfall.
Between 1652 and 1656 Rembrandt made frantic attempts to get his hands
on money to pay off his debt. He did not succeed and was forced into
bankruptcy. In 1656 Rembrandt’s property was inventoried for the benefit
of his creditors, and his household effects and collection of art and
curiosities were sold. The house was auctioned in 1658 and fetched
something over eleven thousand guilders. Rembrandt moved to a small
rented house on the Rozengracht, where he lived until his death in 1669.
1658–1911 In 1660–62 Rembrandt’s former house was shored up and
split into two. It was to house several different families up to the end
of the nineteenth century. During this period the house was altered
several times, and its condition deteriorated over the years. The house
might well have been demolished had it not once had such a famous
occupant. Action was taken on the occasion of the Rembrandt exhibition
in 1906. The City of Amsterdam bought the dilapidated building and
shortly afterwards handed it over to the Stichting Rembrandthuis, a
foundation set up in 1907. The trustees of the foundation wanted to
return Rembrandt’s former home as accurately as possible to the state it
was in around the middle of the seventeenth century. The envisaged
reconstruction did not, however, go ahead. The board opted for a
contemporary approach without historical references. The Rembrandt House
became the setting for a print collection. The drastic restoration was
carried out under the supervision of the architect K.P.C. de Bazel. The
restoration of the house was completed in 1911, and Queen Wilhelmina
opened the museum.
1911–the present In the museum’s early years the collection of etchings
grew steadily as a result of gifts and purchases. There were temporary
exhibitions at regular intervals, but few changes were made to the
interior of the house. But then, in the nineteen-nineties, there were
some major developments. The trustees succeeded in acquiring the
adjacent premises, enabling them to build an extension to the museum.
The façade of the new building was designed by the architects Moshé
Zwarts and Rein Jansma, the interior by Peter Sas. The new wing, which
was opened on 7 May 1998, houses two exhibition galleries, the
secretarial department, offices and the library, with the Rembrandt
Information Centre. Once the new wing was completed, it was possible to
resurrect the old plan to restore Rembrandt’s former home to its
original condition. The reconstruction did not progress without a hitch.
Champions and opponents of the plan conducted a fundamental debate about
the ethics of the restoration of historic buildings. Once the board of
the Rembrandt House was given the go-ahead, the work proceeded very
carefully. In order to tackle the restoration plans as meticulously as
possible, a restoration team was put together. It was headed by the
building historian Henk Zantkuijl, an expert in seventeenth-century
houses.
The plan was based on historical knowledge built up over many
years. There was also a thorough study of available sources. The
inventories of the house were very important—the inventory of 1626
belonging to the first occupant of the house and, in particular, the
inventory that was compiled in 1656 because of Rembrandt’s bankruptcy.
This latter source enabled the experts to work out how the house was
laid out during this period and how Rembrandt had used the different
rooms. Some of Rembrandt’s drawings and etchings provided additional
information. The structural drawings for the restoration were made by
architect Maarten Neerincx in consultation met Zantkuijl. The work was
done by the firms of Kneppers and Midreth. The restoration was completed
in 1999.
History of the collection Queen Wilhelmina officially opened the Rembrandt House
Museum on 10 June 1911. At the suggestion of the painter Jan Veth, one
of the members of the museum’s first board of governors, it had been
decided to assemble a collection of Rembrandt’s etchings, which, it was
felt, could hardly be better displayed than in the house in which most
of them were made. Veth himself laid the foundations for the collection
with the temporary loan of the etchings in the Lebret-Veth collection
that were of sufficient quality. The first gifts were not long in
coming.The first gift of an etching came from Paul Warburg in New York:
a fine early impression of St. Jerome beside a pollard willow.
In the same year the artist Jozef Israels gave the new museum six
etchings including Abraham’s sacrifice from the famous English
collection of William Esdaile. An honorary member of the board of
governors, P. Hartsen, deserves a special mention. His generous
donations, having helped make the purchase of the house possible in the
first place, then continued to add to the buying fund. The Rijksmuseum
donated eleven etchings, duplicates from its print room, which have been
in the Rembrandt House ever since. The collection grew rapidly. In May
1913 thirty-three Rembrandt drawings from the famous English collection
of J.P. Heseltine were auctioned in Amsterdam. The Rembrandt House
succeeded in acquiring four of these: Woman with a child on her arm ,
The ruins of the Old Town Hall in Amsterdam, View of the
Montelbaenstoren in Amsterdam and Seated girl, sleeping. The Rembrandt
House bid successfully at other sales too. In 1914 Jan Veth returned
from Berlin with nineteen etchings, including such important pieces as
Death appearing to a wedded couple, The large lion hunt and – to bolster
the then still poorly represented landscapes – a fine impression of the
View of Haarlem and Bloemendaal.
The war years that followed brought a temporary end to the growth
of the collection, although in 1915 the Foundation was able to buy
sixty-six etchings from Veth’s collection, most of which were already on
loan to the museum. They included some beautiful and rare prints, among
them The flight into Egypt, etched on a plate by Hercules Segers, and
David and Goliath, designed as an illustration for Menasseh ben Israel’s
book Piedra Gloriosa (Amsterdam 1655). In 1927 the Rembrandt House was
to acquire, as a gift from I. de Bruyn, one of the extremely rare copies
of the first edition of this mystical work, including Rembrandt’s four
illustrations. Other items to come from the Veth collection were an
early, heavily inked impression of the fourth and final state of The
three crosses and the beautiful little portrait of Rembrandt’s mother.
The museum’s collection of drawings was also growing, albeit slowly. In
1919 two sheets came from the estate of the artist Therèse van Duyl, who
had bought them at the famous Heseltine sale: the Portrait of an old
woman and the Study of a woman with a child on her arm, now attributed
to Nicolaes Maes. Not long afterwards another drawing from the Heseltine
sale, the self-portrait of the artist in his painting coat, was
purchased. This meant that the museum now had the only drawn full-length
self-portrait.
Jan Veth, the museum’s enthusiastic driving force, died in 1925.
His successor on the board of governors was the collector I. de Bruyn,
who was largely to assume Veth’s role as an adviser. By this time the
collection had already become extremely large. But there were gaps,
mainly in the early dated prints like the self-portraits and studies of
beggars, minority of which were rare. In February 1933 a further six
etchings were bought at the Houthakker/Hollstein sale, although the
threat of war was already looming large. Directly after the invasion of
May 1940 the etchings and drawings were moved into the safe in the
cellar. When floods threatened the city in the spring of 1944 the works
of art were moved to a safer location in a bank vault above ground,
where they remained until after the liberation. The museum reopened in
July 1945. This was followed by a number of lean years. Lack of funds
and a shortage of supply meant that few purchases of any note could be
made. But in 1950 the museum was able to buy a counterproof of the
fourth state of The three crosses: an interesting addition to the states
of the print already in the museum’s possession. The most important
post-war acquisitions are the forty etchings bequeathed to the Museum by
de Bruyn, who died in 1962. These included the very rare first state of
the Self-portrait with bushy hair, a fine impression on Japanese paper
of Christ and the woman from Samaria from the collection of Pierre
Mariette, an early, heavily inked pull of The descent from the cross by
torchlight and a beautiful first state of The bathers.
It was becoming increasingly difficult to fill the gaps in the
collection. Good impressions came onto the market only sporadically and
even then the funds were often lacking – hardly surprising in the view
of the way prices have risen. It was occasionally possible to add
something – as in 1977, when a drawing by Rembrandt’s pupil Constantijn
van Renesse, with corrections by Rembrandt, was purchased with the help
of the Vereniging Rembrandt. Other additions have been the etching Man
at a desk, wearing a chain with a cross in 1980 and, very recently, the
little Bald-headed man in profile and the fourth state of The flight
into Egypt.
The collection as it now stands provides an almost complete
overview of Rembrandt’s graphic work: 260 of the 290 etchings he made
are represented. The acquisition of four original etching plates in 1993
was of great importance. Until then they had formed part of a group of
78 copper plates which had remained together since they were first
mentioned in the inventory of the Amsterdam print seller Clement de
Jonghe. De Jonghe probably acquired the plates directly from Rembrandt.
In January 1993 the collection was offered for sale and the Rembrandt
House Museum was granted the first right of refusal. Thanks to gifts
from various institutions, the government and many private individuals,
the museum was able to purchase four of the finest and best preserved
specimens.
In addition to the collection of etchings, drawings and copper
plates by the master himself, the Rembrandt House Museum also owns a
small number of paintings by Rembrandt’s teacher, his pupils and his
contemporaries. In recent years the museum has increasingly concentrated
its efforts on collecting the graphic work of his predecessors and
followers. Among the most important acquisitions are prints by the
Leiden artists Jan Lievens and Johannes van Vliet, both of whom worked
closely with Rembrandt. The collecting policy does not, however, focus
solely on artists who were directly influenced by Rembrandt. The museum
has spread its net wider to include his later European followers, among
them many eighteenth-century German and Austrian artists. The collection
now includes etchings by Christian Wilhelm Dietrich, Georg Friedrich
Schmidt and others. And finally, there are the specialist areas of
copies after Rembrandt and the many reproduction prints after his
drawings and paintings.
Today the Rembrandt House Museum attracts a great many visitors
with its permanent display of Rembrandt’s etchings and with important
exhibitions. The growing numbers of visitors meant that the museum had
to expand. The public facilities and exhibition rooms have been moved to
a new wing. This transfer has made it possible to restore Rembrandt’s
house. Fortunately, the inventory of 1656 provides a detailed picture of
the interior as it was in Rembrandt’s day. Drawings by the artist also
reveal the character of the rooms. Experts have undertaken lengthy and
detailed studies to ensure that the restoration is historically
accurate. The Rembrandt House is now refurbishing the rooms in an
attempt to get as close as possible to the situation in Rembrandt’s
time.