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tv   Chasing Rembrandt  Deutsche Welle  November 16, 2024 2:15pm-3:00pm CET

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read some more news and analysis, you can check out website dw, dot com. and of course for also on social media at the w use or fed dw use is the handle for platforms like x and instagram. i'm like, look who i'll be back with more news and 45 minutes. the learn shannon ball thinking sharing decide things award winning offer is available for every language, several buildings and has never been sent to the the, the 70 century. and holland was a period where the country grew up,
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the wells came from all over the world and it was to being really staggering and surprising. the people wanted to express their wells and the, there was a new norm is amount of most prosperity here. the, there isn't lawful, aren't in the netherlands and it grows and grows. something was moving and shaking here, there was a lot of artistic innovation going on in many different shot us the, the amount of good painters in holland incense center is, is kind of crazy. the amount, the good paintings produce the if you really started to look at these paintings and interpret them in the right
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way. the world opens the village elder team. the french institute for culture and education on 5th avenue in new york is an integral part of the french embassies presence in the city. it's a beautiful building, and thomas kaplan, an investor likes to stop by whenever he's in town. because france is kaplan, 2nd home. thomas kaplan owns one of the world's largest private collections of dutch masters . he's acquired pieces by everyone from reuben's to premier, but his pride and joy are the more than a dozen works by rembrandt. we don't have so many
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examples of arch that one can point to having an enduring, transcendent impact. the rims rent has that impact still does. rembrandt lived during the dutch golden age a period when dutch society transformed, leading to a new understanding of art and a new commercialized art market. at the center of this development for cities like death, harlem and amsterdam, the one of the largest collections of works from that era can be found here in the reich's museum. demonstrating that the 80 years war between the spanish empire and
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dutch provinces, which resulted in the netherlands independence, also brought about an art historical revolution. there is an influx of really very much talents, artistic, but also wealthy merchants who gas producing. so that that's, that's important. and they bring also a kind of taste with them. i mean, the nurse is really the around 1600 to finish all in comparison with the sauce errors. and for very 1st thing happens in the 16th century, and that comes over to the nursing home and them and finds a fertile ground. here the war had been fueled by the persecution of protestants and the predominantly catholic spanish territories in the netherlands. citizens were granted religious freedom. this attracted protestants, jews and other people persecuted due to their religion. most came from southern
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provinces. today's belgium, which largely remained loyal to spain and catholicism. among them were many painters, and they sparked artistic innovation. the they changed all that, all the shars landscapes didn't live for trance church and terriers. they tried to find her own age with a kind of own style or on subjects. and that's what the argument world then makes extreme. the lives of millions of artworks were created in the 17th century, which is why so many renowned museums have treasures from this time and their collection. but what led to the netherlands becoming such an art factory during this time the,
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the nobility, for example, had lost its importance and the clergy to what had become less important. what the bush was, he and the merchants had gained welski and were suddenly able to afford arch lice, the blossoming cultural period and with it, a flood of paintings was under pinned by a ser plus of capital. this was largely generated through speculative and risky financial business transactions, seafaring and trade. the netherlands was a large colonial power and accumulated a great deal of wealth by trading slaves and exploiting people in the colonies across york. very few people questions such exploitation at the time. what happened overseas seemed a world apart in amsterdam, most people enjoyed their wealth and sought further growth. the money relief that somebody's view devices and that's funds again, for example, you take into account that in 1622 got it around 100000 people lived in amsterdam.
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and that 50 years later, there were twice as many him to you can get an idea of how many powerful people came here in northern netherlands and fuels this. hayden, the blue tale saki, this group of influential people consisted of rich merchants and nobility. among them, the family of e. n. 6. he was a patron and friend of the most famous painter. at the time rembrandt fun right. over the years, rembrandt painted young 6 his portraits, several times almost 500 years later, his descended beyond 6. the 11th is an art dealer for works by rembrandt and his contemporaries. rembrandt go to introduce to the family
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roughly around the early 60 forty's. and remember, it was by then really, you know, big a rockstar him and he was on the top of his career. he painted the richest people, have them, and in the highest elite regions he was now the rembrandt painted numerous commission to works. one of the portraits he made of his patron, you on 6, is considered one of his masterpieces because of the skill with which he depicted the inner workings of his mind. but how did he gains such insights? what was the relationship between the 2 men like? i'm still not really 100 percent sure what it was because we don't have a little note saying there room brands and what a wonderful launch we are. kindred spirits and you know, we just, we just don't know what we do know is it at
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a certain moment and 1642 to very early own words when they met each other. young 6 apparently gave his his friendship, both his album memory for him to run brands. and he said, can you do something for me? and women made a wonderful drawing of, oh, more telling his versus to the people around him. and then underneath it says rembrandts to young 6. so of course that's interesting because it could have routes to mr. 6. 4, he could have just rode remembrance. but he makes that this things notation of from rent to young 6. he puts them on equal par. and the silver other moments where their lives crossed. so there must be more between the 2 that made the connection. beyond 6, the 11th began studying works from the 17th century. as a teenager, there beauty oftentimes astounding. he believes it shouldn't be intimidating. i
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remember being very young, finding all these family porch was looking at you because they follow you everywhere. you go quite scary and i just overcame, that's by really looking at them trying to understand as they were now the owning me. but i was actually holding them by trying to understand the from a young age. our collector, thomas kaplan, also sought to understand the old masters. when i was 6 years old, my mother took me for the 1st time to the metropolitan museum. and i remember going up the steps and i certainly remember the impact that connecting with rembrandt had on me. it clicked and i asked my mother
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continuously every week. please take me back to the river. and since then, the investor has come to own several works by the artist more than anyone else in the world. i remember a week in which i acquired 2 paintings, rembrandt for less than one andy warhol that went to auction. this is discordant. if you asked me why that could happen, or i would have to look no further than myself. i did not know until 2003 that one could acquire a rembrandt the today. anyone
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interested in collecting and understanding the works of the old masters, must delve into the history of the netherlands and it's art. doing so leads back to one person, rembrandt fund right. he created many of his iconic works on you'll be placed right in amsterdam. this is the place where you created in almost 20 years, many of his greatest master plans. the interesting thing about this room is the fact that it has northern lights. so the light fall is very important for him as an artist. and we also know from drawings that rembrandt made how the room was furnished and what kind of props and materials he used. rembrandt made a profit from the art market, setting him apart from his contemporaries. but he did not allow himself to be taken advantage of. he began taking on fewer commissions preferring to paint for patrons
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who granted him artistic freedom. as he, on the 6th, did rembrandt valued his independence in that regard. he can be seen as the 1st modern artist. he was also a collector of all kinds of interesting objects, objects that of course, arrived here at the harbour of amsterdam from all over the world. he was very interested in what we would call exotic objects, stuffed animals, corals, shelves, and weapons. and he created a small museum for himself, and he was one of the 1st artists to collect in this or in this fashion. and it was an inspiration for him. but some of the works. he collected some of the officers to use the menus, paintings and his work and others just for just an inspiration too. for his creativity as an artist.
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rembrandt established his own, our dealership together with his wife saskia on the ground floor of their house. the it was said that any buyer who made the journey to amsterdam to purchase works could spend the night surrounded by them. the be created this fantastic business model. that was, you know, his own artwork. he also had many pupils here who paid quite a sum as a fee to be taught by rembrandt paint and too drawn to rich. but he also was an art dealer. so he sold his own work, of course, but also work by contemporaries by older artists. and by a, by his pupils. so he, you know, unit all these different aspects of business and that really makes him
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a very interesting business man. today, rembrandts are rarely up for sale. only a fraction of his work is still privately owned. the remainder is in museums and will likely never be sold. meaning what is in circulation is highly coveted. we have a painting that we sold this year and a sale in new york and it was a small ramrod, it was, it was this size is one of the smallest from in existence and it was painted just the officer. he went through a very turbulent period in 1640. so you, you're trying see, to brush stroke, you've see the lights, any way he tries to create a c, which we all know it was a abram in the angels, but he puts a different sort of perspective to it and, and we'll try to sort of grasp his beard rates, and he is the way he wanted to enhance the story with his sort of magic. but i'm not sure if he viewed it himself like that. but we don't want to be close to that
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sort of virtuoso spiritual. came in 2003 rembrandt self portrait was cheated. eyes was sold at a saw the beef auction for over $11000000.00. it's a self portrait of $1634.00 and the signature is here. but when this project came in with us, it actually looks quite different. it looks like this. so you will see actually the, you know, the whole closing has changed in the face is, has changed to summer. still the same, but more interesting, even from the 1935, their picture looks like this or was very big catch with lower hair with the same for color. then they removed the hatch and bit of the lower hair and it looked like this. this is around 1966, and then we had a cleaned by very good restore together with the technical data they research was an x ray. and then the service was revealed. the for color, i mean there's enough for another for color, not with the golden chain,
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whole face change, and it turned out to be so fortunate by run run, but it was painted over in the seventy's century. so the restore a head to free and we're move 70 century paint from 70 century paint and i must be painstakingly difficult to do that. you have to use a scope on these very experience, but he could only do a few centimeters a day. it's amazing what can happen to a painting which looks, you know, totally different in the beginning. so we should be careful with this sort of paintings. since 2008, this self portrait has been part of thomas kaplan's collection. and like all his rembrandts, it is all waste on loan. the, on the rare occasion when the works aren't on loan, they are kept in secure storage. a few hours outside of new york visitors are not usually permitted. but naturally, for thomas kaplan,
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an exception is made. the collector has not seen some of the paintings for years. wow. it really kept, is you right from the the, my god. it's like being back with old friends the she was my 1st. you always remember your 1st
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she was the one i actually kissed on the lips. that's the truth. the year if you look, you have a doctor presumably taking rocks from the patients head. and if you look closely at the painting, if you look at his face, you feel the pain. he is in agony. he broke some mold in the conception of what beauty was. he put aside all of the classical italian, they conventions, and expressed his own sense of beauty. and he did
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this without him. so whether it was intended or not by breaking all conventions, he was a liberator. and all those who followed over that debt of gratitude to rembrandt. that's why i think he is so trying to send the art dealer again. 6 was also able to on earth, a treasure. in 2016, he spotted an unknown rembrandt. the 1st to be discovered in some 40 years. his sharp i paired with his tenacity and rigorous research, resulted in him beating out the competition. i think the most important thing to realize when you look at the work of art, is that for some reason for a 100 years or so, people have missed looked at that picture. they misinterpreted the picture because
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that's the only reason that is lost in a big museum or it's look placed in a rice context. so something is wrong. and we tend to call that a sleeper. our dealers, like yeah, and 6 work with a painting for years in the hope that rember and scholars will confirm its authenticity in the end. exhaustive scientific analysis decides the fate of what is often discovered by intuition. she looked at a portrait and by remembrance, always the person who is portrayed is looking at you. instead of you looking at the person, is this an easy feeling? if somebody's looking at you? and if you're turning your gaze away, you feel as somebody is looking at me this slightly all settling. that is sort of how i can explain it with portraits. once you see it, it hits you. and so there must be an immediate contact. that's well,
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that's sort of a stomach feeling concept. the, the moment 6 saw a portrait of young gentleman labeled as a work from rember and circle. he had a gut feeling the look to that painting and immediately salt hang on. this is much better than the ocean has it, is, is this telling us? and that the moment that really made the click for me was a technical problem. this portrait shows the young man wearing a very distinct piece of lace work. and that lace came into fashion a very distinct time. so the pains and comedy before 6031 or 32. and
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then with fashion, it's exactly the same as nowadays. fashion codes for young people. it doesn't count for old people, but in this case you see a very young boy. you know, he live, she doesn't really have a little stash or a beard. i mean, it's, his cheeks are so pinkish, it is really young. and so he's wearing his legs the ocean house presented. it is as a painting from the circle of rembrandts. well, if you look at the fashion that was just not possible because the fashion with the young boy, it had to be between 603126034 or 5 tops most likely around 33. 34 is that the stings of the rumors at that time. he didn't have a circle. following the advice of the on 6, an investor bought the painting in 2016 for a 137000 pounds. today,
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it has been confirmed as a genuine rembrandt and is worth many times that amount. typically, rembrandts, bread and butter for portraits, commissioned works for the wealthy bourgeois z nobility on the other hand, preferred historical paintings that he thought about, such as your mother. he's 20 of the people she biblical history, in fact, had always been at the top of the hierarchy. so once on a short while later, when 17th century netherlands landscape started to rise in popularity, followed by portraits and done and then at some point, john repainting context was the showed him other night. john ro, paintings depicted ordinary people and every day seats, both educational and something of a cautionary tale for upper class observers. today, these works attracts less interest from museum goers, especially in comparison to
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a large format painting like this. rembrandts the night watch, visitors come in droves. it's one of the most valuable paintings in the netherlands . and recently the subject of an intensive research and conservation project. so what becomes more and more aware is that we solved a little bit and all of the painting has been painted it's, it's over, it has nothing changes. but of course it's, there are kind of chemical reactions going on and this will continue or way. so have a painful change in color, things will group out or and this is a little bit extreme, but the painting isn't living material or at least some things happen to 6th street really difficult if you want to think 20 or certain people in one group is out in the coming stiff,
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so his soul said was with bringing that kind of movement and it's, and they are really well, they seem to walk out of the counselors in one way. and that's of course, really the, the 1st important standard in the early 70 century. and fortunate to solve the problem and nobody in an effort got that level of life. rembrandt also looked outward for inspiration. artists and holland observed each other closely and engaged in lively competition. the painter was certainly aware of what his colleague, friends halls was doing in harlem. friends halls was the 1st artist even before rembrandt, to create a large scale commissioned works for the people of his hometown, the
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even in his lifetime, friends halls was known outside of holland. despite his fame and wealthy clients, he struggled financially throughout his life. his legacy, his impressive collection of works. the sons holes is certainly the 1st to show the news brush stroke. but he is a little bit separate if find something and he is full sitting, develops with all his life and, and that is i think he wanted to paint the kinds of movements and dynamism he wants to paints life. the, as is often the case in the history of art, the value of friends hall's paintings over the centuries was determined by
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contemporary taste. the one is it sounds house paintings. i very much cherish is the region testers of the st. elizabeth hospital. and it's one of the latest portrait stats and on the houses painted. he was probably in his 80. so almost it's geriatric, even for especially for the 17th century that was unusually old. well, they love about the painting is that it's out of time. it doesn't fit with the 17th century, and at the same time, i also loved the fact that it was both hated and cherished all throughout history. in the 18th century, you see an old literature that this painting was seen as absolute garbage, as the proof of the fact that phone calls when he was old, have no control over his hand. and he was probably shaking that with him,
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suggested that he had all time or that he didn't know how to paint anymore. that had a lot to do with the 18th century. a focus on the academic painting needed to be precise according to the rules. and this was different, so it was really shock decide you see market prices are for on sales at the time, also going down. that was not appreciated. and then suddenly everything shifts around at the end of the 19th century. cuz i'm a french collector and critique thought a bit ago, together with a large group of artist that he incited from for a whole to my name on the scene. are sergeant murray castle. whistler started loving this painting by france. halls. i said this is an, it's an icon. know it's a, this is the prove that sounds house was an off on guard painter. he was ultimately modern. he was a head of his time. he bates like we do realistic, impressionist. he had something extraordinary and this painted was then seen as the absolute proof because of his loose brush stroke. it's use of color in its
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dimensions of black. so it's also, it's amazing how one painting that basically stays the same, go through all the stages of being valued and appreciative, but also of being absolutely discarded. and we are located, it's still here because i think if it wouldn't have been in a semi public institution in the 18th century, would probably have disappeared. most of the are created in 17th century netherlands, no longer exists. but collectors dealers and historians continue to hope another france halls or rembrandt will be on earth. ringback the. busy the we come to people's connections, people's houses, castles, and we have to do events, race, and sometimes you going to as a national event, 3 and things are not on it or are all there have been miscast,
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over another capital oak. and i love just go into a house or call. so wherever and put the right name on this. even sometimes i can't find it. but my discuss with colleagues are a try to do some research for that. i just, or you discover who is, who, or even a small artist and i looked in bathrooms. i looked in kitchen as i look above the door cuz you never know what you're trying to find. the around $10000000.00 pages were probably made of which we now have. the estimate is 5 percent less because of that, you know, think us laska burned, destroyed whatever happened, the north, many paintings remain from the artist and from here his body of work is small. in comparison to that of his peers, like rembrandt, who created over 300 artworks. the premier is an interesting example
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because we do say that he didn't paint so much because a he took right on to prepare the pigments for his paintings to paint. then he didn't have to paint for the my name because he was very true, very rich wife and, and he may, we believe actually he paid to. well, if we look at the air from now, i think around 37 accepted her mirrors that he probably painted just one a year. but of course we're not sure because we, we weren't there. and he didn't post is the work on instagram at the time. the already during his lifetime, beyond for me or could charge high prices for his few very detailed paintings, which he sold to wealthy patrons and delved. the
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if we look at the lenders painting, we talk about the trinity. you have it envelopes for me, it sounds house and 3 big boyce monica that we still remember today. and if you look at the eval for me, it's very mysterious, it's or intimates there's. it's very difficult to understand what the symbolical meaning was. what the intention was, it's very domestic for me or was not only a painter, but an art dealer to. despite his talent for creating magnificent interior scenes and his proven expertise, he was impoverished at the end of his life. the demons of human expression seem as august i'd have even office of if you consider the interior since you portrayed like these young women by an open window off are shown in profile. if you brought out the details of their dress fabric, their hair styles, the jewelry, one, you can really get
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a sense of the wealth of the 17th century english disappears. you know, not today . several vermeer paintings can be seen in the ranks museum. among them is the milk made. in 1696, it was sold at auction for the considerable sum of 175 dutch guilders. it's hard to fathom the amount it would be worth today. but the milk mad, it's a combination of, i guess the colors which really are lovely and the way that he puts that for me, puts a milk mate in the center of the painting. it's, it's so you're looking at another of a portrait of a noble person or an important person is it's a meal, right. and is there such self smith and sweetness and that's just wonderful structure. and. and i think for mirrors. but for me as a very special painter, cuz he was really, yeah, out of the ordinary. wonderful kind. to some extent
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the 17th century laid the foundation for the art world as we know it today. at the time auction houses begin opening their doors, a d r dealer was developing as a profession. and collectors, emerged among the birch was the art was starting to be democratized, and influenced that can still be felt today. the for many artists in the netherlands today, this rich history is something of a blessing and a curse. on some level, it's hard not to measure themselves against the masters at the 17th century. and while they're inspired by the technique and artistry of their predecessors, they must set themselves apart and develop their own unique style. it's not
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to to hit to sit there is to fall asleep, but it's more of stick. if you have to paint something very detailed, you use this to lean on to get a step behind because to be paying something very small in detail. you, eh, you can get shaky, but you use this as that. and uh, an ice painting where you can see how it was used is the beauty of it for me, a painting and in the cruise to stores just what you said, painted from the back, leaning against it, leaning his hand against the most stick to paint as more detail for swedish painter or bonn, larson, 17th century, dutch art is an important point of reference the i think the similarity between how i
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work and accept the century master's work is, i mean, those separate things. one once, as i work from lights, a nice thing is also using northern lights. i only work with daylight because i don't, i don't believe that that had a lamp can give the same. so effect, as a said, a lot of the materials are, you know, way quite similar painters like larson are continuing the legacy of an important 17th century innovation. capturing the inner life of models on the canvas to this day. it remains a key benchmark for what makes a commissioned portrait. a work of art portrait painting is like walking on a tightrope. on this line above a, you know, huge downfall. you have to use your intuition. you just have to go at the same time
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as you have to really think about every stroke, every a meeting you put down on the canvas. and now i think the, when you use this intuition and, and when you really get into it, that's the part where the character or the personality or the spirit. but it goes beyond just likeness. and that happens in the process if you are emotionally an completes into it. no one was able to do that quite like rembrandt. which is why his portraits are so valuable. the loop and the rags museum acquired these works together, spending 160000000 euros for martin, and option a couple and their ancestors are linked to a dark chapter in dutch history. they are symbols of conduct for public. they are, well see they are young, they show that they loved each other. do they bring
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a new ivan see? and then it's that will show and we tend to forget to where dwells came from. but the wealth came from slavery, from a lot of, of, uh, trading weapons and so on and, and colonialism. and it is good to, to be aware of those things. and those paintings don't change or it's nice to me differently that them a long way and was a different thing. s at that age. that's how arch from the golden age and it's dark side should be approach. today is a subject of lively debate. scholars also considered to what extent artist like rembrandt profited from it while opinions diverge on those matters. there is consensus about one thing. there was never another golden age like it. it was one that ran its natural course,
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the $672.00. we say i'm john does auster year, so then the district public is text bind to english by defense, bind the germans from all sides. so it's, it's, it's really it's, it's a narrow escape, really for, for an adult, for public. they're almost gone. and off of that economy has to, well they, they revive in one way and, and so still in the 18th century it's, it's still a very rich conference. you have to understand that all of us at that time show wealthy. so incredibly wealthy by only the, you know, the wealth day and mast and that whole century before that they didn't have to do a lot. they were actually were tired, so to speak. and it starts to change in the middle of the 18th century, where the, the fortunes are diminishing because they're doing nothing. they're just spending.
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and then around $175070.00 sixty's. the have to sell the art from holland was sold all over the world during the following centuries, and it remains scattered. it's rare that a painting finds its way back to the place where it was made the i thought to myself, i'm not a 100 percent. sure what it is, but the whole build up and the, the, the, the approach is very much like, remember, and was used to work. so i decided to do a little research. and for the last one of 2 years, i've been trying to place everything together to see if that could actually work if
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this could actually fit within the of a rembrandt and room. it has a quite a sting methodology. and you can see it isn't a little details the way he uses the ground for shadow areas, or how he builds up the shadow part of a face with the reflection of something that is reflecting back to the shadow. hold the little details. i'm looking at them thinking about them, and that might eventually leads to both. this is to try to prove that this is actually by reference. because again, this lady is looking at us. we're trying to look at her, but she's really making contact with you. this is very, very rare in portage here. so maybe one day in the not too distant future, the next on nursed, rembrandt could be introduced to the world. the,
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