Image for Reframing Rembrandt  : Jews and the Christian image in seventeenth-century Amsterdam

Reframing Rembrandt : Jews and the Christian image in seventeenth-century Amsterdam

Part of the An Ahmanson-Murphy fine arts book series
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This richly detailed study reconceptualizes a striking but enigmatic moment in Rembrandt's art from the 1650s - one of the artist's most prolific and creative periods.

Michael Zell identifies a significant theological shift in Rembrandt's use of religious imagery and interprets this shift in light of the unique religious and social conditions of seventeenth-century Amsterdam.

Rembrandt's biblical art has generally been regarded as the embodiment of a Protestant aesthetic.

By looking closely at the artist's relationship with his patron Rabbi Menasseh ben Israel and the ideas of a group of "philosemitic" Protestants with whom the rabbi was engaged in an apologetic dialogue, Zell deepens and complicates our understanding of Rembrandt's sacred art from this period.

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Product Details
0520227417 / 9780520227415
Hardback
04/03/2002
United States
English
280p. : ill.
26 cm
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