THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO
> ww.artic.edu/aic
OVERVIEW
VISITOR INFORMATION
EXHIBITION THEMES
SELECTED WORKS
RELATED EVENTS







    OVERVIEW

    Special tickets ARE REQUIRED for this exhibition.

    Rembrandt’s Journey: Painter, Draftsman, Etcher
    February 14–May 9, 2004
    Rice Building, Galleries 262-72

    Rembrandt van Rijn (1606–1669) is one of the most celebrated artists in history. With more than 200 works from all periods of his long career—20 paintings, 33 drawings, 153 prints, and 7 copper plates taken from major collections here and abroad—this is the first American exhibition to explore Rembrandt’s astonishing range and variety of activity as a brilliant etcher seen in the context of his paintings and drawings. Rembrandt’s Journey highlights the parallel relationships among the master’s paintings, drawings, and prints—closely examining imagery, narrative content, and the marks of the artist’s hand, as well as his approach to religious illustration in all of the media he mastered and reinvented. A closer study of the expressions, gestures, and body language of his figures will provide deeper insight into the inventive, subtle, and complex way he interpreted biblical texts and imaginatively projected himself into them. The exhibition will focus on several of the subjects to which Rembrandt returned—portraits and self-portraits, everyday life, landscape, the nude—at various stages of his career.


    CATALOGUE
    Rembrandt’s Journey: Painter, Draftsman, Etcher exhibition catalogue: 344 pages. Hardcover $60; softcover $35.
    ORGANIZERS
    Rembrandt’s Journey: Painter, Draftsman, Etcher is co-organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Art Institute of Chicago.

    CURATORS
    Rembrandt’s Journey: Painter, Draftsman, Etcher was curated in Boston by Clifford S. Ackley, chair of the Department of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs (Ruth and Carl Shapiro Curator of Prints and Drawings); in Chicago by Suzanne McCullagh, Anne Vogt Fuller and Marion Titus Searle Curator of Earlier Prints and Drawings, Department of Prints and Drawings, the Art Institute of Chicago.

    SPONSORS
    This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. Additional support has been provided by The Rhoades Foundation/Julius Lewis Exhibition Fund.

    Sponsorship support for the Chicago presentation is provided by the Abbott Laboratories Fund.

    National sponsorship for this exhibition is generously sponsored by Merrill Lynch.





    ABOVE: Old Man in a Gorget and Black Cap, c. 1631, oil on panel, the Art Institute of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Kimball Collection, 1922.4467



> ww.artic.edu/aic
Last updated: October 2003. Best viewed with Netscape Navigator 4.0 or higher.
Reproduction Permission. Copyright © 2003. All rights reserved.