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Rembrandt's Jews (Paperback, 2nd ed.)
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Rembrandt's Jews (Paperback, 2nd ed.)
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There is a popular and romantic myth about Rembrandt and the Jewish
people. One of history's greatest artists, we are often told, had a
special affinity for Judaism. With so many of Rembrandt's works
devoted to stories of the Hebrew Bible, and with his apparent
penchant for Jewish themes and the sympathetic portrayal of Jewish
faces, it is no wonder that the myth has endured for centuries.
"Rembrandt's Jews" puts this myth to the test as it examines both
the legend and the reality of Rembrandt's relationship to Jews and
Judaism. In his elegantly written and engrossing tour of Jewish
Amsterdam--which begins in 1653 as workers are repairing
Rembrandt's Portuguese-Jewish neighbor's house and completely
disrupting the artist's life and livelihood--Steven Nadler tells us
the stories of the artist's portraits of Jewish sitters, of his
mundane and often contentious dealings with his neighbors in the
Jewish quarter of Amsterdam, and of the tolerant setting that city
provided for Sephardic and Ashkenazic Jews fleeing persecution in
other parts of Europe. As Nadler shows, Rembrandt was only one of a
number of prominent seventeenth-century Dutch painters and
draftsmen who found inspiration in Jewish subjects. Looking at
other artists, such as the landscape painter Jacob van Ruisdael and
Emmanuel de Witte, a celebrated painter of architectural interiors,
Nadler is able to build a deep and complex account of the
remarkable relationship between Dutch and Jewish cultures in the
period, evidenced in the dispassionate, even ordinary ways in which
Jews and their religion are represented--far from the demonization
and grotesque caricatures, the iconography of the outsider, so
often found in depictionsof Jews during the Middle Ages and the
Renaissance.
Through his close look at paintings, etchings, and drawings; in his
discussion of intellectual and social life during the Dutch Golden
Age; and even through his own travels in pursuit of his subject,
Nadler takes the reader through Jewish Amsterdam then and now--a
trip that, under ever--threatening Dutch skies, is full of colorful
and eccentric personalities, fiery debates, and magnificent art.
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