Portrait of Nicolaes Ruts

Portrait of Nicolaes Ruts (1573–1638) is a 1631 painting by the Dutch artist Rembrandt van Rijn. It is one of Rembrandt's earliest commissioned pieces and helped launch his career as a portrait painter. The painting is housed in the Frick Collection.

Portrait of Ruts, 1631

The portrait is painted in oil on a mahogany panel, and measures 46 x 34 in (116.8 x 87.3 cm).[1] In it, Ruts is depicted wearing a type of robe (known as a tabbaard) with a sable lining; a translucent neck ruff; and Russian ushanka hat. He holds a note in his proper left hand and looks directly at the viewer; his right hand rests on the back of a red chair. The text of the note Ruts is holding in the portrait is illegible, except for the date of 1631.[2]

Nicolaes Ruts (1573–1638), the subject of the portrait, was born in Cologne and became an Amsterdam Mennonite merchant who frequently traded with the Russian colony at Arkhangelsk. Rembrandt painted the portrait of him in 1631, when Ruts was 58 years old.[3] As a merchant, Ruts was not particularly successful, and filed for bankruptcy shortly before he died. The portrait may have been commissioned by his daughter Susanna who, together with her husband, was quite a successful Amsterdam merchant.[2]

Provenance[4]

Susanna Ruts, Amsterdam, and descendants. By 1799, Joost Romswinckel, Leyden and The Hague. After 1817, Anthony Meynts; his sale, Amsterdam, July 15, 1823 (lot 107) as Portrait of a Man; to Brondgeest (possibly as agent for Dutch royal family); Willem II, king of the Netherlands; his sale, The Hague, August 12, 1850 (lot 86), as Portrait d'un Rabbin; to Weimer, The Hague Adrian Hope; his sale, Christie's, June 30 1894 (lot 57); to Agnew's Joseph Ruston, Monk's Manor, Lincoln; his sale, Christie's, May 21/23, 1898 (lot 95) Colnaghi; to Comte Boni de Castellane, Paris (via E. Fischof); to J. Pierpont Morgan, before 1903; to The Frick Collection, 1943 (via Knoedler's).

See also

References

  1. Ann Sutherland Harris (2005). Seventeenth-century Art and Architecture. Laurence King Publishing. p. 336. ISBN 978-1-85669-415-5.
  2. "The Frick Collection". Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  3. Michael Bockemühl (2000). Rembrandt, 1606-1669: The Mystery of the Revealed Form. Taschen. p. 39. ISBN 978-3-8228-6320-6.
  4. "Nicolaes Ruts". Retrieved February 20, 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.