Portrait of a Woman, probably a Member of the Van Beresteyn Family

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Portrait of a Woman, probably a Member of the Van Beresteyn Family
Year1632
Mediumoil paint, canvas
Dimensions111.8 cm (44.0 in) × 88.9 cm (35.0 in)
LocationMetropolitan Museum of Art
OwnerLouisine Havemeyer Edit this on Wikidata
CollectionMetropolitan Museum of Art Edit this on Wikidata
Accession No.29.100.4 Edit this on Wikidata
IdentifiersRKDimages ID: 58704
The Met object ID: 437388

Portrait of a Woman, probably a Member of the Van Beresteyn Family is a 1632 oil-on-canvas portrait painting by Rembrandt. A depiction of a woman with an unusually large millstone collar, it is a pendant to Portrait of a Man, probably a Member of the Van Beresteyn Family. Both portraits are in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[1]

Description

Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer
bequest in 1929.

This painting was documented by Hofstede de Groot in 1914, who wrote:

625. A LADY OF THE VAN BERESTEYN -VUCHT FAMILY. Dut. 248; Wb. 344; B.-HdG. 83. Three-quarter length; life size. She stands to the left, seen almost in full face, at a table with a greenish-blue cover, on which she rests her left hand. She is of middle age. Her fair but greyish hair, combed well back from the face, is covered at the back with a small cap and fastened with a rosette-headed pin. She wears a flowered black silk gown with slashed and puffed sleeves; she has a greenish-gold girdle, several strings of pearls at her throat and her wrists, a gold chain on her bosom, a broad lace-trimmed ruff over a soft lace collar fitting closely round her neck, and lace-trimmed cuffs. In her right hand she holds a black ostrich-feather fan by a gold chain. Cool light comes from the left. See notes to 624, to which this is a pendant. Signed on the right above the table, "RHL van Ryn 1632"; canvas, 44 1/2 inches by 35 1/2 inches.

Mentioned by

Michel
, p. 119 [91, 443]. In the collection of the Beresteyn family, Chateau Maurik, Vucht, 1884.

In the collection of the late H. O. Havemeyer, New York.[2]

The painting was included in most Rembrandt catalogs of the 20th century, only recently being disputed as autograph by Walter Liedtke, though this is not reflected in the latest RRP catalog. It is, however, still connected with Rembrandt's workshop and time period and is still considered a pendant to its pair. Despite numerous attempts, the provenance does not reach further back than the Havemeyer purchase from Chateau Maurik, and as Hofstede de Groot states in his entry for the male portrait, the pendants could just as easily have descended in the female line as the male line, and therefore the portrayed couple might not be related to the Beresteyn family at all. Considering the shadows on the wall and assuming the portraits were painted at around the same time in the same place, it is possible the woman is quite a bit shorter than the man, but painted to fill the space. This would explain why her collar appears so large, since presumably the standard bleaching and starching molds were used for it as was common for collars of the nobility in 17th-century Amsterdam.

  • The man's portrait hangs on the left
    The man's portrait hangs on the left
  • The woman's portrait hangs on the right
    The woman's portrait hangs on the right

See also

References

  1. ^ "Portrait of a woman, possibly a member of the Beresteyn family". Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  2. ^ 625. A Lady of the van Beresteyn-Vucht Family" in Hofstede de Groot, 1914 Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.

External links