Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn is one of the greatest painters in the entire history of Western art, and the presiding figure of the Dutch Golden Age. An incomparable portraitist, a painter of biblical and mythological subjects of unequalled spiritual depth, and an engraver of exceptional virtuosity, he developed a use of chiaroscuro of a subtlety and expressiveness that surpasses all his contemporaries — including Caravaggio, whose lessons he inherited and radically transformed. Where Caravaggio strikes, Rembrandt enfolds; where Caravaggio confronts, Rembrandt invites contemplation. His life — marked by glory, fortune, ruin and grief — is one of the most dramatic in the history of art.
A Leiden Childhood and an Early Formation
Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn was born on 15 July 1606 in Leiden, a university city in the Dutch Republic, the eighth child of a prosperous miller, Harmen Gerritszoon van Rijn, and his wife Neeltgen Willemsdochter van Zuytbroeck, a baker's daughter. The family belonged to the comfortable bourgeoisie of a city in full economic and intellectual bloom.
In 1620, at fourteen, Rembrandt enrolled at the University of Leiden but left quickly to devote himself entirely to painting. He entered the studio of the local painter Jacob van Swanenburg, with whom he trained for about three years. In 1624–25 he went to Amsterdam to complete his training under Pieter Lastman, a history painter influenced by the Roman manner of Caravaggio and Elsheimer, who taught him the art of narrative and dramatic composition. That six-month stay was decisive: Rembrandt absorbed the lessons of Caravaggesque chiaroscuro and began to develop his own treatment of light.
Back in Leiden, he set himself up as an independent painter and formed a shared studio with Jan Lievens, a contemporary whose talent quickly drew attention. Constantijn Huygens, secretary to the Stadholder Frederik Hendrik, visited them in 1628 and left an enthusiastic account of the encounter, testimony to the early reputation of both young painters.
Amsterdam: Glory and Happiness
In 1631–32, Rembrandt settled in Amsterdam, the most dynamic commercial and financial metropolis in Europe, where demand for portraits and large compositions was considerable. His success was immediate and total. The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp (1632, Mauritshuis, The Hague) — a group portrait depicting a public dissection performed by the surgeon Nicolaes Tulp before seven Amsterdam notables — was a masterstroke: the composition solves the classic problem of the group portrait (how to make seven people equally present and interesting) by uniting them around a dramatic event, and the chiaroscuro reaches a power and nuance without equal in Dutch painting of the period.
In 1634 he married Saskia van Uylenburgh, niece of the art dealer who was his principal commercial intermediary. Saskia was beautiful, cultivated, from a prosperous family; the union was happy. Rembrandt represented her in numerous canvases — as the goddess Flora, as an allegorical figure, in scenes of domestic life. In 1641 Saskia bore him a son, Titus, the only one of their four children to survive childhood. She died in 1642, aged twenty-nine.
The Night Watch and the Complexity of Fame
In 1642, the very year of Saskia's death, Rembrandt completed The Night Watch (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam), perhaps the most famous painting in all of Dutch art. This group portrait, commissioned by the Amsterdam civic guard company of Captain Frans Banninck Cocq, shows the company preparing to march out — a nocturnal scene (though it is in fact a daytime scene darkened by centuries of varnish) of extraordinary dynamism and composition, in which Rembrandt abandoned the traditional row-by-row arrangement of group portraits to create a vivid, moving narrative scene.
Contrary to the persistent legend that the painting was poorly received and marked the beginning of his decline, contemporary documents show that The Night Watch was appreciated. Rembrandt's commercial decline during the 1640s and 50s was due to more complex factors: a shift in taste towards a more sober, elegant classicism inspired by France, which he refused to follow, and his mounting financial difficulties.
Ruin and Spiritual Depth
In the 1650s, Rembrandt's affairs collapsed. In 1639 he had bought a fine house on the Jodenbreestraat in Amsterdam — today the Rembrandt House Museum — at a price he ultimately could not repay. In 1656 he was declared insolvent. His possessions were auctioned in 1657–58: his collection of paintings, objects of art, armour, exotic textiles — all went. He was forced to rent more modest lodgings.
These trials did not break his genius — they deepened it. The paintings of his maturity and old age are among the finest he ever produced. His self-portraits — he made around a hundred over his lifetime, constituting the longest visual journal any artist has ever kept — reach in the years 1650–60 a depth and serenity that few artists in history have ever matched. The ageing face, lined and marked by suffering and wisdom, looking at the viewer with disarming frankness and humanity: these late self-portraits are among the most profound works in the entire Western pictorial tradition.
He lived with Hendrickje Stoffels, a young domestic servant he could not marry — his marriage contract with Saskia would have required him to forfeit her estate if he remarried — who remained absolutely loyal to him until her death in 1663. Titus, his son, managed his art business and died in 1668 aged twenty-seven, leaving Rembrandt alone. The Jewish Bride (c.1665–69, Rijksmuseum), depicting a couple in a moment of extraordinary tenderness and intimacy, is perhaps his testament on human love.
Death and Legacy
Rembrandt died in Amsterdam on 4 October 1669, aged sixty-three, in relative poverty but esteemed by his peers. He was buried in the Westerkerk in Amsterdam in a rented grave that no one would renew when the lease expired — his bones were dispersed in a common grave.
His influence on European painting is fundamental and enduring. The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam holds the most important collection of his works, including The Night Watch and a series of self-portraits that together constitute one of the greatest experiences that painting can offer. Goya, Delacroix, Courbet, Van Gogh, Matisse, Bacon — all drew nourishment from his example and from his way of treating light as a revelation of the human soul.