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Friday, April 3, 2026 |
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| Rembrandt's Saint James the Greater at Sotheby's |
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Rembrandt van Rijn, Saint James the Greater, signed and dated 1661. Image courtesy of Sotheby's.
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NEW YORK.- Sothebys January 25, 2007 sale of Important Old Master Paintings in New York will feature an extraordinary work by Rembrandt van Rijn, Saint James the Greater, signed and dated 1661, which is from a group of single figure, half-length portraits of religious figures executed by the artist in the late 1650s and early 1660s. This emotive work, which depicts the disciple in profile, turned slightly to the right, was formerly in the renowned collection of benefactor Stephen Carlton Clark, grandson of the founder of the Singer Sewing Machine Company and brother of Sterling Clark, founder of The Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts. Having descended in Mr. Clarks family, the work was recently gifted to a foundation that has consigned it for sale -- The Shippy Foundation in the aid of Social Justice, Human Service and Education. Measuring 36 ¼ x 29 ½ in. (92.1 x 79.9 cm), this rare, large-scale George Wachter, Vice Chairman and Co-Chairman of Sothebys Old Master Paintings Department Worldwide said, This extraordinary painting is certainly one of the most important works by Rembrandt that Sothebys has ever handled. Over the past 20 years, the vast majority of pictures by the artist that have appeared on the market have dated to the 1630s and 40s it is exceedingly rare to have one that dates to the 1660s. Works of this period, the last decade of Rembrandts life and a time of personal turmoil, are extremely intense, soulful and introspective.
The painting depicts the Apostle James, the patron saint of pilgrims, with a drawn and weathered face, in a dimly lit interior. His cloak is tattered and his cape is fastened with shell, representing his voyage across the Mediterranean to Spain where he founded the pilgrimage church of Santiago de Compostela. His wooden staff, worn from use, rests against the wall beside him. The disciples large hands are clasped in prayer and his piety and spirituality are palpable. Mr. Wachter noted, The hands of the Apostle are particularly moving, the gradations of color -- browns and grays -- are absolutely breathtaking.
The illustrious provenance of this work is traceable back to the 18th century, possibly with the sale of the heirs of the Dutch artist Caspar Netscher. In the 19th century, the work was owned by Sir John Charles Robinson, the first curator of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, as well as the renowned German collector Edmund Friedrich Weber, before it came to the United States at the turn of the century through the great dealer Joseph Duveen. It was acquired by the automobile magnate John North Willys of Toledo, Ohio in 1913, and then entered the collection of the American showman and theater producer, Broadway Billy Rose, in 1945. Mr. Clark then purchased the painting in 1955, and it descended in his family before it was given to the foundation that has consigned it for sale.
Recently, it has been included in important exhibitions of the artists work at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, CA and the Staatliche Museen in Berlin, Germany.
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