Object data
pen and brown ink, with opaque white; framing line in brown ink
height 157 mm × width 189 mm
Rembrandt van Rijn
Amsterdam, c. 1650 - c. 1655
pen and brown ink, with opaque white; framing line in brown ink
height 157 mm × width 189 mm
stamped: upper left, with the mark of Dienast (L. 2816)
inscribed on verso: upper left, in red chalk (crossed out), illegible; upper right, in red chalk, rm (?); centre, in pencil, 10; lower left, in pencil, wfaf (?); lower centre, in pencil (with the no. of the 1895 Pitcairn Knowles sale), 544x; lower right, in pencil (with the Hofstede de Groot cat. no.), degr 1159
stamped on verso: lower left, with the mark of Pitcairn Knowles (L. 2643); lower centre, with the mark of the museum (L. 2228)
Watermark: Countermark with letters, AD
Light foxing throughout
...; collection Johann Konrad Dienast (1741-1824), Basel (L. 2816); ...; collection William Pitcairn Knowles (1820-94), Rotterdam and Wiesbaden (L. 2643); his sale, Amsterdam (F. Muller & Co.), 25 (26) June 1895 sqq., no. 534-x, fl. 160, to Hendrik Jacobus Valk (1863-1940), Amsterdam, for the Vereniging Rembrandt;1 from whom, fl. 184, to the museum (L. 2228), 1901
Object number: RP-T-1901-A-4529
Credit line: Purchased with the support of the Vereniging Rembrandt
Copyright: Public domain
Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn (Leiden 1606 - Amsterdam 1669)
After attending Latin school in his native Leiden, Rembrandt, the son of a miller, enrolled at Leiden University in 1620, but soon abandoned his studies to become an artist. He first trained (1621-23) under the Leiden painter Jacob Isaacsz van Swanenburg (c. 1571-1638), followed by six months with the Amsterdam history painter Pieter Lastman (c. 1583-1633). Returning to Leiden around 1624, he shared a studio with Jan Lievens, where he aimed to establish himself as a history painter, winning the admiration of the poet and courtier Constantijn Huygens. In 1628 Gerard Dou (1613-75) became his first pupil. In the autumn of 1631 Rembrandt moved to Amsterdam, where his career rapidly took off. Three years later he joined the Guild of St Luke and married Saskia Uylenburgh (1612-42), niece of the art dealer Hendrik Uylenburgh (c. 1587-1661), in whose house he had been living and working. She died shortly after giving birth to their son Titus, by which time Rembrandt was already in financial straits owing to excessive spending on paintings, prints, antiquities and studio props for his history pieces. After Saskia’s death, Rembrandt lived first with Titus's wet nurse, Geertje Dircx (who eventually sued Rembrandt for breach of promise and was later imprisoned for her increasingly unstable behaviour), and then with his later housekeeper, Hendrickje Stoffels (by whom he had a daughter, Cornelia). Mounting debts made him unable to meet the payments of his house on the Jodenbreestraat and forced him to declare bankruptcy in 1656 and to sell his house and art collection. In the last decade of his life, he, Hendrickje and Titus resided in more modest accommodation on the Rozengracht, but Rembrandt continued to be dogged by continuing financial difficulties. His beloved Titus died in 1668. Rembrandt survived him by only a year and was buried in the Westerkerk.
Joseph, sold by his brothers and put into prison through the machinations of Potiphar’s wife, is interpreting the dreams of the Egyptian pharaoh’s butler and baker (Genesis 40:1-19). He tells the butler that within three days he will be restored to favour by the pharaoh and reinstated in his function, but the baker’s dream means that within three days he will be hanged. On the fingers of his left hand, the young Joseph is counting the three days that remain until the butler’s release. The butler is seated on the ground, listening with amazement, but the standing baker has yet to be told of his fate. The basket on the ground alludes to Joseph’s eventual appointment as the pharaoh’s chief administrator, in charge of storing up the harvest in the good years in preparation for subsequent years of famine.
Rembrandt has characterized the facial expressions particularly well: Joseph confidently interpreting the butler’s dream, the butler clutching his head as the news gradually sinks in, and the baker waiting passively to hear the interpretation of his dream. The composition of the drawing is very simple, almost symmetrical, and depicts only the figures and their relationship to one another. Aside from the bale of straw at the lower left, the prison cell is barely indicated. The pen lines are drawn irregularly with several contrasts in tone, and the forms have been concisely depicted with little detail. Rembrandt used a very dry pen for the hatched shading.
Joseph in Prison dates from the early 1650s. In a drawing of the same subject by Rembrandt of circa 1639, on the verso of a double-sided sheet in the British Museum in London (inv. no. Gg,2.248 verso),2 it is the baker who is being addressed by Joseph and is reacting to the interpretation of his ill-fated dream. Unlike the Amsterdam drawing, the figures in the London drawing are seated at the bottom of a staircase, an indication of the dungeon setting. Joseph’s authority is conveyed not through his face (in shadow from the wash penetrating through from the recto), but rather by his erect bearing. A similar arrangement, with Joseph standing or half-leaning against a low wall and both of the other prisoners seated, this time without much indication of setting, can be seen in another early drawing of the subject by Rembrandt, datable perhaps just after the London sheet, in the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles (inv. no. 95.GA.18).3
Rembrandt may have borrowed the motif in the Amsterdam sheet of Joseph counting on his fingers from Lucas van Leyden’s print of the theme from his series of five engravings of the Story of Joseph (e.g. inv. no. RP-P-OB-1595).4 This print may also have been the source of the details of the baker’s flat cap and the butler’s plumed hat in the London drawing, which are not so clearly drawn in the Amsterdam drawing. Several drawings of the subject now assigned to Rembrandt pupils show that they were inspired by their master’s drawings, as well as by Lucas’s print. For instance, three drawings previously given to Rembrandt by Benesch are now all considered to be by pupils. Two are probably by Govert Flinck, one in The Art Institute of Chicago (inv. no. 1967.144)5 and the other formerly on the Amsterdam art market and now in a private collection;6 the latter is closer to the present composition, in reverse, with a pyramidal arrangement showing Joseph seated in profile, talking to one prisoner, while the other stands in the background, leaning his elbow against a ledge. As I first suggested in 1985, the third school drawing of the subject accepted by Benesch, in an American private collection,7 is probably by Ferdinand Bol, as, too, is a version of the theme in the Hamburger Kunsthalle in Hamburg (inv. no. 22412), which was also once thought to be by Rembrandt.8
Rembrandt’s earlier drawings in the British Museum and the Getty seem also to have been the models for several paintings by or attributed to Rembrandt pupils, including one in the Staatliches Museum in Schwerin (inv. no. G 65),9 another in a private collection in Amsterdam, now widely accepted as by Govert Flinck,10 one signed and dated 1643 by Gerbrand van den Eeckhout in the Bob Jones University Museum & Gallery in Greenville (SC) (inv. no. P.63.328.26)11 and, finally, one signed and dated 1648 by Jan Victors in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam (inv. no. SK-A-451).12
By contrast, the later Amsterdam sheet seems clearly to have served as a source for other drawings in the style of Rembrandt.13 These borrowings illustrate how Rembrandt’s drawings were used by his pupils, for whom biblical scenes of this kind were probably specifically made.
Peter Schatborn, 2017
C. Hofstede de Groot, Die Handzeichnungen Rembrandts, Haarlem 1906, no. 1159; W.R. Valentiner, Rembrandt: Die Meisters Handzeichnungen, 2 vols., Stuttgart and elsewhere 1925-34, I (1925), no. 110 (c. 1652); M.D. Henkel, Catalogus van de Nederlandsche teekeningen in het Rijksmuseum te Amsterdam, I: Teekeningen van Rembrandt en zijn school, coll. cat. The Hague 1942, no. 63 (c. 1652); O. Benesch, The Drawings of Rembrandt (rev. edn. by E. Benesch), 6 vols., London 1973 (orig. edn. 1954-57), no. 912 (c. 1652); P. Schatborn, Catalogus van de Nederlandse tekeningen in het Rijksprentenkabinet, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, IV: Tekeningen van Rembrandt, zijn onbekende leerlingen en navolgers/Drawings by Rembrandt, his Anonymous Pupils and Followers, coll. cat. The Hague 1985, no. 42, with earlier literature; M. de Bazelaire and E. Starcky, Rembrandt et son école: Dessins du Musée du Louvre, exh. cat. Paris 1988-89, p. 64, under no. 55; M. Royalton-Kisch, Drawings by Rembrandt and his Circle in the British Museum, exh. cat. London 1992, p. 82, under no. 27; J. Garff, Drawings by Rembrandt and other 17th-century Dutch Artists in the Department of Prints and Drawings, the Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Copenhagen, Copenhagen 1996, p. 28, under no. 7; A. Röver-Kann, Rembrandt, oder nicht? Zeichnungen von Rembrandt und seinem Kreis aus den Hamburger und Bremer Kupferstichkabinetten, exh. cat. Bremen (Kunsthalle) 2000-01, p. 36, under no. 3, fig. b; M. Schapelhouman, Rembrandt and the Art of Drawing, Amsterdam 2006, pp. 94-95, fig. 91; J. Shoaf Turner, Dutch Drawings in the Pierpont Morgan Library: Seventeenth to Nineteenth Centuries, coll. cat. 2 vols., New York 2006, pp. 155-56, under no. 229; M. Royalton-Kisch, Catalogue of Drawings by Rembrandt and his School in the British Museum, coll. cat. (online 2010), under no. 24, n. 12; R. Verdi, Rembrandt’s Themes: Life into Art, New Haven/London 2014, p. 91, fig. 76
P. Schatborn, 2017, 'Rembrandt van Rijn, Joseph in Prison Interpreting the Dreams of Pharaoh’s Butler and Baker, Amsterdam, c. 1650 - c. 1655', in J. Turner (ed.), Drawings by Rembrandt and his School in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.28560
(accessed 15 November 2024 23:43:55).