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Archive for posts tagged with ‘Helmet’
Jun 22 2011
A Man in Armor
Dutch / Greco-Roman / Paintings (Reproductions) / Rembrandt - 11 months ago - troycapc
This is a reproduction of “A Man in Armor” of 1655 by Rembrandt van Rijn. This later Rembrandt masterpiece is sub-titled “Alexander the Great” and was created when the artist was forty-nine. He had been a prominent artist and member of the community in Amsterdam for twenty years. Yet Rembrandt was approaching a financial crisis when this masterpiece was produced. The painting shows Rembrandt’s wonderful use of light in his works with the gleam on the helmet also expressed over the heart on the breast-plate. The red robe adds to the dramatic nature of the portrait. This masterpiece is 137 cm wide and 104.5 cm high and is in the City Art Gallery and Museum of Glasgow, Scotland.
Reproduction for sale on Zazzle
Jun 28 2010
Man in the Golden Helmet by Rembrandt van Rijn, ca. 1650
Paintings (Reproductions) / Rembrandt - 1 year ago - troycapc
This reproduction of the famous “Man in a Golden Helmet” is stunning. The original was created in about 1650. It is considered one of the greatest masterpieces of western art and was very influential over Impressionist painters. This is not a commissioned portrait but a study made up of an older man who had sat for Rembrandt before and a helmet that was in the artist’s collection. The original is now displayed in the Gemaldengalerie in Berlin.
Rembrandt was born in 1606 Leiden and, after schooling in Latin and the Classics, he entered an apprenticeship in painting when sixteen years old. After a brief stay in Amsterdam he returned to Leiden and opened a studio with his friend Jan Lievens; they were both nineteen. He soon won acclaim through influential contacts and in 1630 moved to Amsterdam after the death of his father. Four years later as a master of the Guild of St. Luke Rembrandt gathered a large number of students about his workshop. He married that year and continued to produce masterpieces such as the Abduction of Ganymede, the Sacrifice of Isaac and the Night Watch. His domestic tranquility was disturbed by the death of his wife in 1642 but Rembrandt continued his prodigious output. Nevertheless Rembrandt was forced into bankruptcy in 1654 and mostly lived in seclusion until his death in 1669 though he continued to produce masterpieces.
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