Details
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (1606-1669)
Christ healing the Sick ('The Hundred Guilder Print')
etching with drypoint and engraving, circa 1648, on laid paper, watermark Letters (similar to Hinterding Miscellaneous F.a), a fine impression of New Hollstein's third state (of four), with Captain Baillie's rework


Plate 280 x 394 mm.
Sheet 294 x 405 mm.

Provenance
Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723-1792), London (Lugt 2364).
L’Arte Antica, Ferdinando Salamon Gallery (monogram placed on prints verso between 1957 and 1964), Turin (Lugt 3403).
Literature
Bartsch, Hollstein 74; Hind 236; New Hollstein 239
Special notice
Please note this lot is the property of a consumer. See H1 of the Conditions of Sale.
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Lot Essay

...'also here is the rarest print published by Rembrandt, in which Christ is healing the sick, and I know that in Holland [it] has been sold various times for 100 guilders and more; and it is as large as this sheet of paper, very fine and lovely, but ought to cost 30 guilders. It is very beautiful and pure.'

So states Jan Meyssens of Antwerp to Carolus van den Bosch, Bishop of Bruges, in a letter dated 9 February 1654. This extract provides the clue as to how this print gained its famous sobriquet: the print was so desirable that only a few years after its creation it was exchanging hands for the exceptionally high price of 100 guilders.

Christ healing the Sick was a significant turning point in Rembrandt's development as an etcher; it is his first major work in which light and shadow were used to obtain such expressive power. By depicting four separate strands of the narrative of Matthew 19 in one composition, Rembrandt was embarking on the ambitious task of uniting all elements harmoniously. The image is almost at the risk of falling into two discrete halves: the left sketchy and bright, the right densely worked and dark. Yet through careful composition and the introduction of a halftone, Rembrandt managed to balance the image and created a continuous tableau, with Christ as the focal point of this highly complex composition. It is his most 'painterly', most ambitious and possibly most sought-after print.

The present impression was printed by Captain William Baillie (circa 1724-1810), who in 1775 acquired the heavily worn plate and, being an engraver himself, skilfully reworked it before printing a limited run of one hundred impressions, before cutting the plate into three pieces from which he printed separate images. The quality of Baillie's impressions is remarkable and his reworking of the 'Hundred Guilder Print' is one of the rare cases of a successful restoration of a printing plate.

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