Rembrandt's Amsterdam
Reprinted, by permission of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, from “The Print-Collector's Quarterly”
Frits Lugt
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston1915
Illustrations
- PLAN OF THE CITY OF AMSTERDAM ABOUT 1650
- Plate 1. View of Amsterdam from the East. (reversed). After the etching by Rembrandt
- Plate 2. The Old Town Hall in Amsterdam. After an engraving by Cl. Jz. Visscher.
- Plate 3. The Ruins of the Old Town Hall in Amsterdam, after the Fire in 1652. After the drawing by Rembrandt, formerly in the Heseltine Collection, now in the Rembrandt House in Amsterdam.
- Plate 4. The New Town-Hall in Amsterdam, about 1660. The square building on the right is the public Weighing-House, where Rembrandt sketched the ruins of the old town-hall (see preceding illustration). After an etching by J. van der Ulft, 1656.
- Plate 5. The Bridge Called “Grimnessesluis” in Amsterdam. After the drawing by Rembrandt in the Louvre, Paris. Reproduced, by permission, from a copyright photograph by Messrs. Braun and Co., Dornach.
- Plate 6. View of the Ramparts of Amsterdam, with the St. Anthony-Gate in the Distance. After the drawing by Rembrandt, formerly in the Heseltine Collection.
- Plate 7. Mills on the West Side of Amsterdam, Looking Toward the Town. After the drawing by Rembrandt, formerly in the Heseltine Collection, now in a private collection in Kopenhagen.
- Plate 8. View of the Same Side of Town as in Plate 7, but Looking Outward. The tower on the left is the same as sketched by Rembrandt (plate 13). After an etching by R. Zeeman, about 1650.
- Plate 9. The Tower Called “Montelraanstoren” In AmsterdamAfter the drawing by Rembrandt, formerly in the Heseltine Collection, now in the Rembrandt House,
...
Sitemize Üyelik ÜCRETSİZDİR!