The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Deijman

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Deijman
Rembrandt van Rijn
Year1656
Dimensions100 cm × 134 cm (39 in × 53 in)
LocationH'ART Museum, Amsterdam
Preparatory sketch for the work.

The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Deijman (alternative spelling Deyman) is a 1656 fragmentary painting by Rembrandt, now in Amsterdam Museum. It is a group portrait showing a brain dissection by Dr. Jan Deijman (1619–1666). Much of the canvas was destroyed in a fire in 1723 and the painting was subsequently recut to its present dimensions, though a preparatory sketch shows the full group.

The painting shows Dr. Deijman performing a brain dissection on the cadaver of an executed criminal, the Flemish tailor Joris "Black Jack" Fonteijn (1633/34–1656), an habitual offender who had robbed a textile store with a knife resulting in his execution by hanging.[1] Dr. Deijman's assistant, the surgeon Gijsbert Calkoen (1621–1664), is seen on the left, holding the top of the dead man's skull.

The perspective of the corpse is depicted with exaggerated

foreshortening in Mantegna's Lamentation of Christ
, which Rembrandt would have been familiar with through prints.

Joris Fonteijn

Joris Fonteijn (1633 / 1634-1656), nicknamed “Black Jan” (Zwarte Jan), was originally from Diest in Flanders. Trained as a tailor, he served three and a half years with the Dutch East India Company. After his return to Diest, in October 1653, he squandered the maternal inheritance and became a delinquent. At the end of 1655, he was caught in the act of a burglary at the Nieuwendijk in Amsterdam. He was sentenced to hang on January 27, 1656 and executed two days later. The firearm he used during the burglary is displayed above his head, "for the edification of others". Subsequently, his body was made available to surgeons for three days for their training, and he was buried on February 2 at the Zuiderkerkhof.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ de Paz Fernández, F. J. (2018). "Rembrandt's Anatomy lessons" (PDF). Neurosciences and History. 6 (1): 1–9 – via nah.sen.es.
  2. OCLC 45115018
    .

External links