On view

European Art
Duane Wilder Gallery

The Three Trees,

1643

Rembrandt van Rijn, 1606–1669; born Leiden, Netherlands; died Amsterdam, Netherlands
2019-96

Like the paintings on the wall opposite this case, these four works show varied approaches to depicting the landscape in the seventeenth-century Low Countries. Savery’s drawing of the Tyrolean Alps reflects a sixteenth-century taste for expansive views of often exaggerated mountainscapes, punctuated by miniature scenes of figures along a path that the eye traverses as it recedes into the background. Visscher’s village road reveals a turn to more domestic and quotidian views of rural life that became popular in the early seventeenth century. In contrast to Visscher’s sleepy boulevard, Ruisdael’s and Rembrandt’s etchings heighten the drama of the Dutch countryside, casting a massive, gnarled tree as a central protagonist, or—in Rembrandt’s case—staging three silhouetted trees backlit against the pageantry of an approaching squall. While the passions of the natural landscape take center stage, Rembrandt hid a barely discernable pair of lovers in the shadows at bottom right.

More About This Object

Information

Title
The Three Trees
Dates

1643

Medium
Etching with drypoint and engraving
Dimensions
plate: 21 × 28 cm (8 1/4 × 11 in.) sheet: 21.3 × 28.5 cm (8 3/8 × 11 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund and Laura P. Hall Memorial Fund in memory of the Museum’s dear friend and benefactor David A. Tierno
Object Number
2019-96
Place Made

Europe, Netherlands

Signatures
Signed and dated lower edge, towards the left: Rembrandt f 1643
Marks/Labels/Seals
F [under crown] [Lugt 968]; Metz
Reference Numbers
Gersaint 204; Bartsch 212; Hind 205; White-Boon 212; The New Hollstein 214
Culture
Materials

Ferdinand, Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha and King of Portugal (1815-1885), stamp verso, lower left, in black (Lugt 968); his sale, J. M. Heberle, Cologne, November 29 ff., 1893, lot 2103; “Metz” collection (collector’s mark with the letters METZ on verso, lower left, in black; not in Lugt); [probably Frederick Keppel & Co., New York]; Frederick B. Pratt (1865-1945), New York; thence by descent; purchased by the Princeton University Art Museum, 2019.

Landscape with Three Trees