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Christ Crucified between the Two Thieves (The Three Crosses),

1653–55

Rembrandt van Rijn, 1606–1669; born Leiden, Netherlands; died Amsterdam, Netherlands
x1969-310
Rembrandt’s genius as a printmaker and skill as an interpreter of the Bible coalesce in The Three Crosses. One of the artist’s greatest works in any medium, this powerful and profound depiction of the Crucifixion demonstrates his expressive use of drypoint, which he began adding to his etchings in the 1640s. He was the first artist to fully exploit the dark, velvety richness and painterly effect of this technique, created by the inked burr, or metal residue, left by the fine lines scratched directly into the copper plate with a needle. Using the burin, or engraving tool, in conjunction with drypoint, Rembrandt obscured much of the foreground action with a driving black rain of long slanting strokes. Vast, apocalyptic beams of light pierce the leaden sky, falling on the crucified Christ—the emotional and compositional focus of the scene.

More Context

Rembrandt’s genius as a printmaker is illustrated in his use of drypoint, which he began adding to his etchings in the 1640s. He was the first artist to fully exploit the dark velvety richness and painterly effects of drypoint, created by the inked burr, or metal residue, left by the fine lines scratched directly into the copperplate with a needle. In spite of the fragility of the burr, which wears down quickly with each impression, Rembrandt employed drypoint with increasing frequency, and almost exclusively in several masterpieces from the 1650s, including <em>The Three Crosses</em>. One of Rembrandt’s greatest works in any medium, this profound and powerful interpretation of Christ’s crucifixion ­underwent an unusually drastic conceptual and physical reworking, as represented in this impression of the fourth state. Rembrandt’s previous version of <em>The Three Crosses</em>, dated 1653 in the third state, depicts the moment of Christ’s death and the revelation of his divine nature, which, as described in Luke’s Gospel (23:44–8), occurred during the "darkness [that] fell over the whole land." Here, in the even darker and more pictorial fourth state, Rembrandt vigorously scraped away and burnished large portions of the plate, changing some of the bystanders and altering Christ’s facial expression so that now he is shown suffering on the cross before his death — at the moment when, according to Matthew (27:45–46), he cried out, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" Using the burin, or engraving tool, in conjunction with drypoint, Rembrandt obscures much of the anecdotal incident with a driving black rain of long slanting strokes, heightening the violent contrasts in illumination. Vast, apocalyptic beams of light pierce the leaden sky, falling on the crucified Christ — the emotional and compositional focus of the scene.

More About This Object

Information

Title
Christ Crucified between the Two Thieves (The Three Crosses)
Dates

1653–55

Medium
Drypoint and burin
Dimensions
plate: 38.5 x 45.0 cm. (15 3/16 x 17 11/16 in.) sheet: 43.4 x 48.4 cm. (17 1/16 x 19 1/16 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of David H. McAlpin, Class of 1920, and Mrs. McAlpin in memory of Professor Clifton R. Hall
Object Number
x1969-310
Place Made

Europe, Netherlands

Inscription
Signed in plate: Rembrandt f. 1653
Marks/Labels/Seals
Watermark Collector Otto Gerstenberg's stamp: (Lugt 2785) Montag Mark (262)
Reference Numbers
Bartsch 78; Biörklund and Barnard 63; Hind 270; Hollstein 78; Münz 223; New Hollstein 222.274
Culture
Techniques