An installation of six seventeenth-century Dutch portraits and genre scenes, including two paintings by Rembrandt van Rijn, will go on view March 18 in the Brooklyn Museum's European paintings gallery in the Beaux-Arts Court. The six paintings are on long-term loan from a private New York collection.
The Rembrandts, Self-Portrait with Shaded Eyes(1634) and Portrait of Anthonie Coopal (1635), were both painted in Amsterdam when the artist was in his late twenties. Self-Portrait with Shaded Eyes was hidden for centuries under another portrait. According to Dr. Ernst van de Wetering, chairman of the Rembrandt Research Project (RRP), "the overpaintings were so old one had to entertain the possibility that they had been done in Rembrandt's own workshop." The RRP brought in experts to conduct tests on the portrait's paint surface and assess whether there might be another composition underneath. Six years and several paint layers later, this long-unknown masterpiece was revealed in 2002. Portrait of Anthonie Coopal was commissioned by Rembrandt's new brother-in-law. The artist captured the personality of the ambitious Coopal in the prime of his youth. (A future magistrate and secret agent, Coopal would become one of the most well-connected men in Rembrandt's Amsterdam circle.) Rembrandt painted his sitter in mid-speech, sporting a broad-brimmed black hat atop long brown locks that cascade onto a fashionable white lace collar.Videos