Rembrandt works on tour

DAYTON, Ohio – They’re remodeling his place, so Rembrandt is taking a vacation.

Six paintings and several etchings by Rembrandt van Rijn as well as works from other Dutch masters – long housed in the Netherlands’ national Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam – are hanging in the Dayton Art Institute, www.daytonartinstitute.org, on the first stop of a U.S. tour.

The traveling exhibit opens to the public on today and will be in this Midwestern city for three months before moving on to Phoenix and then Portland, Ore. It comes on the 400th anniversary of Rembrandt’s birth.

“Never before has a collection of this quality left our museum and waltzed into the United States,” said Peter Sigmond, the Rijksmuseum’s director of collections. “It’s really the core collection of our museum.”

The exhibit includes the Rembrandt masterpiece and much-recognized “Self-portrait as the Apostle Paulus,” along with “The Music Lesson,” “Still Life With Dead Peacocks” and “The Denial of Saint Peter.”

The exhibit, “Rembrandt and the Golden Age of Dutch Art: Treasures from the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam,” also includes self-portraits, still lifes and landscapes painted by other Dutch masters such as Jan Steen, Frans Hals, Jacob van Ruisdael, Jan van Goyen and Nicholaes Maes.

The decision to part with the paintings temporarily came when it was determined that the renovation and modernization of the Rijksmuseum, expected to continue until 2009, would limit the display of its collections.

Museum officials decided to turn it into an opportunity to give the United States a taste of Rembrandt. The Dayton museum wasted no time in making a pitch to play host to the exhibit.

“It is really a negotiating process. We go in and say, ‘We want all the best stuff,’ and they say, ‘That’s not going to happen,’ and you negotiate,” Bradford Tillson, interim director of the Dayton museum, said. “We got a lot of good stuff.”

Sigmond said there are several Rembrandt masterpieces, including “The NightWatch” and “The Jewish Bride,” that will never be allowed to travel outside the Rijksmuseum. However, he said he cannot recall a time when six Rembrandt paintings have gone on display together outside of his museum.

“You really have a very important part of our Rembrandts here in this show,” he said. “We feel very confident that our paintings, our treasures, are here in good hands; and we hope many Americans will come.”

Tillson would not say how much the museum and its sponsors are paying in rental fees – only that it is six figures. Museum officials are expecting as many as 50,000 visitors and have already fielded calls from ticket buyers as far away as New York and Georgia.

Born in 1606, Rembrandt won acclaim from an early age, and his work was always in demand. But his life was also marked by hard times. His beloved wife, Saskia, died when she was 29, and Rembrandt went bankrupt in 1658. He died in 1669 and was buried in an unmarked grave.

Mary Connolly, 59, who teaches childhood education at Sinclair Community College in Dayton, got a sneak preview of the exhibition Friday.

“It’s glorious,” she said. “I’ve never seen so much stuff about Rembrandt in one place in my life.”

Steve Braverman, a 51-year-old retired schoolteacher from Dayton, appeared awe-struck as he gazed at the Rembrandts.

“You’re like a kid in a candy store,” Braverman said. “This is like course No. 1. I’ll be coming back at least a couple more times because it takes awhile to absorb.”

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