Rembrandt and The Face of Jesus
For as long as Ive been visiting the Philadelphia Museum of Art there has been a small painting called Head of Christ (image above, top) in the museums John G. Johnson collection of European Art (larger but somewhat oversaturated version here).
It is a small but strikingly beautiful painting, 14 x 12 inches (36 x 31 cm) showing a head and upper torso of a plainly garbed figure, clothing almost fading into the unadorned background, but focusing on a face, obviously that of a real person and not constructed from imagination, painted with exquisite skill.
For a long time the painting was not featured prominently, often tucked away in the corner of a gallery in a modest frame, presumably because its attribution was somewhat in question at times to Studio of Rembrandt, later Attributed to Rembrandt. Its only recently (and Im not sure how recently) that the attribution has changed to Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn, making it the only painting directly attributed to Rembrandt in the museums collection.
Even when the attribution was in question, many visitors, myself included, just loved this painting. If it isnt a Rembrandt, my thought was, its the next best thing, a work painted with such skill as to be considered for attribution to the master, and one with an extraordinary subtlety, economy and painterly finesse. The fact that it was often tucked away in an unassuming corner just made it seem that much more of a hidden gem.
Though I havent heard it confirmed, its my guess that it was the change in attribution that led the museum, in cooperation with the Musée du Louve in Paris and the Detroit Institute of Arts, to mount a new exhibition now on display here in Philadelphia titled Rembrandt and the Face of Jesus.
The exhibition is essentially built around a core display of this painting and six other similar bust-length portraits of comparable size and composition, some attributed directly to Rembrandt, others to the Studio of, but all shedding light on and enriching the experience of appreciating the others (images above, third, fourth and fifth down, with detail 6th down).
These have been borrowed from museums in Europe and the US, but the Philadelphia painting is the centerpiece, and the most striking of the group. I was also particularly impressed with this one (image above fourth and fifth down).
Expanding out from there, the exhibition is filled out with paintings, etchings and drawings, both by the master, his students and other artists who painted related portraits of Jesus, into an exhibition of 40 some works. It explores the changing interpretation by Rembrandt and others of the way Jesus was portrayed, something that had been bound by certain conventions, many of which Rembrandt broke by using live models and portraying Jesus as a real individual instead of an idealized icon.
The exhibit highlights this with some earlier examples by other artists but quickly moves into Rembrandts own groundbreaking interpretations. Though the exhibition is focused on this theme, and is far from a Rembrandt retrospective, it contains several striking works.
The Louvre contributes its wonderful painting of the the Supper at Emmaus (above, bottom two images). The tablecloth alone in this work struck me as a capsule defense of Rembrandt as one of historys greatest painters. The reproduction from the Louvre feature on the exhibit, though not bad, still doesnt to it justice.
http://canandanann.blogspot.com/2011/09/rembrandt-and-face-of-jesus.html
I found the above pictures here...
Rembrandt’s Jesus has a shorter, broader face than the one on the Shroud of Turin. Just sayin’.
Interesting. A priest I once knew in Texas sent my husband searching museums and galleries in England and Scotland for a print of the Supper at Emmaus. We could not find it, and our friend is now deceased. Now, you say that it is at the Louvre. But the picture here meets Fr. Hall’s description of the painting that had moved him so much when he was a Seminarian.