PRINCETON, NJ.- An evocative and technically complex etching by Dutch Baroque master Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-69), "Landscape with Three Trees" (1643), was recently acquired by the
Princeton University Art Museum.
The Princeton University Art Museum holds 70 of the 300 prints produced by Rembrandt over his long career, providing a cross-section of the artists graphic output, ranging from several of his earliest self-portraits and genre studies to some of his greatest late religious compositions. The new acquisition joins the only other landscape etching in the Museums collection, "Landscape with a Thatched Cottage" (1641), which was acquired in 1960.
This exceptional impression of one of Rembrandts most iconic works in any medium represents the artists unrivalled emotional acuity and technical innovation in full bloom, said James Steward, Nancy A. NasherDavid J. Haemisegger, Class of 1976, director. The artists rare work in landscape is perhaps his most prized, and we believe this to be one of the greatest works of landscape art in the European tradition, so we are delighted to have been able to acquire it.
Rembrandt focused on etchings and drawings of landscapes in the years after the death of his first wife, Saskia, in 1642. Of the artists 26 recorded landscape etchings, "The Three Trees" (as it is often called) is the largest and most elaborate, and the most richly imbued with spiritual meaning, often read as a metaphor for the three crosses of the Crucifixion. The atmospheric and theatrical print combines technical virtuosity and conceptual complexity to deliver a visionary spectacle incorporating what has aptly been called meteorological melodrama.
The composition combines three large trees at center right with flat expanses of tilled fields, populated by windmills, cattle and herdsmen and canopied by dramatic clouds and driving rain. The sweeping landscape depicted is generally considered to be a distillation of specific sites in the countryside around Amsterdam, which Rembrandt explored during walking expeditions. Additional human motifs including (on the far right) a seated artist sketching and a horse-drawn wagon full of people; a fisherman and his female companion in the left foreground; and two lovers, barely visible in the shadowy bower at right contribute to the scenes humanistic appeal.
"The Three Trees" was acclaimed critically as early as the mid-18th century. Edmé François Gersaint, the French connoisseur who compiled of one of the earliest known catalogues of Rembrandt prints, stated in 1751 that This Landscape is one of the most beautiful and most finished that Rembrandt made.