Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn
Die drei Kreuze
Descrizione
A very fine, rich impression of the fourth state (of five), printing darkly and evenly with strong plate tone suffused with burr and with dramatic contrasts; after the plate was heavily reworked. Thread margins, trimmed to or on the platemark in places.
This major work within Rembrandt’s graphic oeuvre is a composition executed exclusively with burin and drypoint, created in 1653. The third state bears the artist’s signature and date in the plate; the profound revision leading to the fourth state likely took place around 1655.
In this final state, reworked by Rembrandt himself, the composition undergoes a dramatic transformation. Whereas the first to third states convey a sense of activity and relative brightness, particularly in the central parts of the plate, the fourth state presents a markedly different scene: the composition is condensed, numerous areas are redefined, and several figures are mirrored or repositioned. Of particular note is the transformation of the horseman beside the thief on the left – Rembrandt likely based this figure on a medal by Pisanello, which was probably part of his personal collection.
The fourth state captures the final moment in Christ’s Passion on Golgotha: Christ has died, nature is in upheaval, and darkness falls over the scene. The expressive power and visual intensity of this version make it one of the most compelling examples of Rembrandt’s masterful handling of the etching needle and of printmaking as a whole.
Following Rembrandt’s death, the plate came into the possession of the Amsterdam print dealer Frans Carelse, about whom little is known. Carelse inscribed his name into the plate and printed a very limited number of impressions, which are now of extreme rarity. The subsequent fate of the plate is unknown; no later reprints are recorded.
A restoration at the top centre, smoothed centrefold and other minor restorations; thin abraded line in the upper centre, otherwise in good condition.