The Frick Collection
Rembrandt and His School: Masterworks from the Frick and  Lugt Collections February 15, 2011, through May 15, 2011

Home | Visit | Calendar | Collection | Library | Exhibitions | Concerts | Education | Special Events | Press | Museum Shop | Support | E-News

Special Exhibition
 
Special Exhibitions
Featured Exhibition
Current Exhibitions
Future Exhibitions

Past Exhibitions

Multimedia

Search Our Collections

Search This Web Site


Rembrandt and His School: Masterworks from the Frick and
Lugt Collections

February 15, 2011, through May 15, 2011

Partial Show Extension: Works on loan from the Lugt Collection will remain on view in the Lower-Level Exhibition Galleries through May 22. See a Virtual Tour of the paintings in the Oval Room.

Nicolaes Ruts

Rembrandt van Rijn (1606–1669)
Nicolaes Ruts
1631
Oil on mahogany panel
The Frick Collection

The fifty-eight-year-old Mennonite merchant Nicolaes Ruts (1573–1638) emerges confidently from a neutral background, draped in a fine sable-lined gown known as a tabbaard, an old-fashioned article of clothing associated with learning and tradition. In his left hand, he holds a piece of paper whose handwriting is illegible, but on which the date of 1631, although upside down, is clearly visible.

Rembrandt's imposing effigy of this Amsterdam fur trader, whose business was based in the Russian colony at Arkhangel'sk, is generally considered his earliest commissioned portrait and one that helped launch his career, the artist having moved from Leiden to Amsterdam that very year. The unusual support of mahogany, a wood uncommon in seventeenth-century Europe, may have been provided by the sitter himself. Rembrandt uses it to good effect in applying his brushstrokes in a painstakingly fine and smooth manner to create a seamless illusion of fabric and fur. For the powerfully modeled face, in which Ruts's intense gaze and furrowed brow suggest the weight of his responsibilities, Rembrandt juxtaposed multiple layers of varying colors to create a dignified and sympathetic representation. Ironically, Ruts seems not to have been the most successful of businessmen; he filed for bankruptcy in 1638. It is quite possible that Rembrandt's portrait was commissioned by Ruts's daughter Susanna, who, with her husband, ran a thriving business as merchants in Amsterdam.

 

Director's Greeting | Contact Information | Career Opportunities | Announcements | Virtual Tour | Annual Reports | Search | Center for Collecting | FAQs


Copyright © 1998-2011 The Frick Collection. All Rights Reserved. | Privacy Policy | About the Web Site | Image Permissions | Terms of Use