--> YouTube-Generated Transcript <-- 0:04 · On the night of the 18th of March 1990, two men dressed as policemen enter the 0:09 · Isabella Gardener Museum in Boston. They tie up the two night guards and walk directly to the Dutch salon where 0:16 · Rembrandt's works hack. Several hours selecting various artworks. A part of our heritage has been stolen 0:23 · from us. It's a barbaric act. Some of the paintings, the thieves cut two Rembrandt paintings 0:29 · and 10 other works out of their frames. The paintings are worth $500 million. 0:35 · It is the biggest art heist in history. The only seascape Rembrandt ever painted. 0:40 · Already a highly sought after painter in his day. The Dutch master still enriches 0:45 · the world's most important collections today. Who was this Barack genius who 0:51 · has enchanted people through the centuries? Rembrandt was not only a miraculous talent as a painter, but he 0:58 · also had a mighty mind. The Dutch artist seems to capture people's souls when he paints. His 1:05 · provocations are extremely modern. When he painted a naked woman, for 1:12 · example, he did not depict her as an object of male desire, but as a victim of sexual abuse. He was one of the most 1:18 · innovative painters who has ever lived. [Music] Today, scientists appearing beneath the 1:25 · rich layers of paint trying to uncover the secret of Rembrandt's magic. 1:32 · He was very conscious of himself as a kind of conjurer, as a magician, a 1:38 · crafts person, but he was also aware that there were certain tricks of the trade. For a time, the master leads a 1:45 · life blessed by light, soon to be overcast by the darkest of shadows. 1:54 · [Music] 2:05 · They hand him the code thief. They hang him. 2:11 · Wonderful. Rembrandt Fanrine has been waiting for this day for weeks. He has received an 2:18 · extraordinary commission. The surgeons of Amsterdam want to be 2:24 · painted by him. It is to be the young artist's first major work. To do this, 2:30 · he has to leave his studio and take part in a postmortem. [Music] 2:37 · Anatomy sessions were quite a public spectacle in the Netherlands at the time. There was music. People brought 2:43 · food and incense because the corpses stank. So, it was really a very, very big show. is a shore. 2:51 · Only male criminals were dissected. This man contaminated by sin. He is now 2:59 · able after his death to do an honorable Nicholas Tulp is Amsterdam's leading surgeon. 3:04 · He and his colleagues pay a lot of money for Rembrandt to portray their work on God's creature man for posterity 3:11 · to better understand the wonders of the but how to portray a random group of surgeons and their lecturer in the right 3:17 · light. A tricky task for the young painter. After all, his clients want to 3:22 · be recognized clearly in the finished oil painting. All this during the spectacular autopsy in which Tulp 3:29 · exposes the flexor muscle of the arm. 3:37 · Rembrandt comes up with an ingenious trick for this. He practically stacks the surgeons on top of each other. 3:45 · However, the surgeons are not the main attraction in his portrayal. 3:52 · What do we see in the center? The dead criminal, the corpse. At its core, the 3:57 · picture is dedicated to him, even if it makes a very brutal impression at first. 4:02 · It shows the executed criminal as a human being capable of suffering 4:08 · and creates one of the most fascinating works in art history. But Rembrandt Fan 4:14 · dares even more. [Music] 4:19 · He has only recently moved to Amsterdam from the small town of Leiden. Now he is using the commission to make a name for 4:26 · himself. He cheekily shapes the belly button of the corpse as an R. 4:36 · The artist's signature also speaks volumes. Like the great masters, he only 4:42 · signs his work with his first name. He simply omits the fan. 4:49 · There's also this sense of ego because you know we know Michelangelo and Raphael and Tishan, but for a Dutch guy 4:56 · to just use his first name is quite unique. But with Rembrandt, you know 5:01 · immediately it's got to be that guy. In a way, it's like a neon sign on your paintings. 5:10 · The young Rembrandt will make Nicholas Tulp immortal with his painting. For the 5:15 · artist, the anatomy session is the starting point for a fabulous career that will lead him to the bright and 5:22 · dark sides of existence. The simple Miller son will revolutionize art. 5:31 · If you go across the range of the human experience, there will be part of 5:36 · Rambrandt's V that will speak to that questions of love, questions of 5:42 · sexuality, questions of power, of violence, of loneliness. 5:50 · Rembrandt Van entered the world in Leiden in6006. His ancestors named themselves after the 5:56 · river that flows through the city and passed his parents' mill towards the sea. 6:05 · [Music] I'm convinced that the mill as an object 6:14 · which reflected the light in a certain way was very important for young Rembrandt. [Music] 6:22 · He must have been attracted by the sun coming through these little windows. And 6:28 · this is of course a fascinating image uh which would would have been in the in 6:33 · the in the eyes and the minds also of the famous painter that later on painted 6:39 · portraits. 6:44 · The writer Ano Blum goes in search of the origins of the magician of light and shadow in his own hometown. 6:53 · The first time the name of Rembrandt is written down on a document is in this 7:00 · book of the Leiden University. And in 1620, 7:06 · Rembrandt Hermoni Leenses who was the son of Herman from Leiden, 7:12 · Studio Literarum was going to be studying the letters, the arts on this 7:18 · university. He was honor 14. He was 14 years old, a little boy with curly hair 7:26 · and he lived with his parents, Aput Bares. I think that he came here to the 7:33 · academy with his father and the recctor sat down and he put for the first time in history 7:39 · on paper. So this is magic for someone who loves Remrant. 7:46 · The education that the craftsman's son received at the oldest university in the Netherlands would also directly 7:52 · influence his later works. If you would have to say who Rembrandt really was, 7:59 · then he was a storyteller, a brilliant storyteller. All these stories from the 8:04 · Greek myth and from the Bible uh Rembrandt painted afterwards in a very 8:10 · special way. Biblical scenes saw the depiction of ancient sagas such as the 8:15 · rape of Pesphanany become gripping stagings of human tragedies. 8:25 · He even invented scenes that are not in the Bible. So, you know, he he could really play 8:32 · with the insightfulness that he had. In keeping with the motto null das sinia 8:40 · since his earliest childhood not a day goes by that Rembrandt does not paint or 8:46 · draw. He devotes himself to his passion. First 8:53 · he opens his own studio in Leiden. 8:59 · [Music] Then he tries his luck in Amsterdam, Holland's commercial metropolis. The 9:05 · young artist's light shines brightly. His exceptional talent is quickly recognized in the city. 9:13 · [Music] God almighty. Can't we have some peace around here? 9:19 · Go. The influential art dealer Henrikenborg 9:25 · promoted the willful painter. Rembrandt, what is it? I must crack on. He arranges 9:31 · his first commissioned portraits, including that of the surgeons around Dr. Tulp. 9:36 · I've brought someone with me. But more importantly, he introduces Rembrandt to his cousin Saskia, who is 9:43 · in town for a visit. Good day. 9:49 · Is it true that light and shadow come alive on your canvas? 9:54 · At least that's what my cousin tells me. Uh, your cousin tells you that. 9:59 · Uh so uh I may Iask we can almost imagine Saskia Islandboy 10:05 · as a fairy tale figure who suddenly entered Rembrandt's life. She was young, she was beautiful, she was rich, she was 10:11 · noble, she was actually more than Rembrandt, the miller's son, could ever have expected from life. 10:17 · Um naturally it's not finished yet, but but perhaps you can understand on 10:22 · principle what I'm aiming for. 10:27 · What is that? That's a secret. [Music] 10:34 · Saskia is 20 years old. She comes from Freezeland from a traditional family of 10:40 · Calvinist solicitors and politicians. She then leaves her Fian homeland and 10:47 · moves to Amsterdam with him. And she really proves to be a stroke of luck for him in every respect. She probably often 10:53 · had his back, if only because as a woman from high society, she had a better knack for dealing with well-healed 11:00 · clients. Will you be long? 11:06 · It's so cold without you in bed. I still need a bed. Not all the island books were 11:12 · enthusiastic about Satka's choice. I think you need some yellow. 11:18 · Hey, you can't get You wait. You can't get me. 11:24 · About 3 months after their first encounter, the two become engaged and are married a year later. 11:33 · Saskia chooses the magician of light and shadow. 11:40 · Rembrandt is also popular among thieves. His works have been stolen from museums more than 81 times. 11:52 · One of his portraits is even called the takeaway Rembrandt. It has already been stolen four times and reappeared each 11:59 · time. The Stockholm art heist kept the world 12:04 · on tent hooks in December 2000. Three men break into the Swedish National 12:10 · Museum with machine guns and steal two Renoirs and a Rembrandt. As a decoy, 12:16 · they set two cars on fire and then escaped by speedboat. 12:24 · In 2005, the art treasures were returned to the museum. 12:30 · Such luck has so far eluded the Isabella Gardener Museum in Boston. The 13 12:35 · masterpieces stolen from there have been missing since 1990. A reward of $10 12:41 · million has been offered for information on their recovery. [Music] 12:48 · Only one real remandant remains in the museum. It shows the artist at the age 12:53 · of 23. One of his extraordinary self-portraits. [Music] 13:00 · Immediately you see these dark dark pupils of the eyes looking out at us. 13:05 · And I think he knows that the way people look at pictures they'll be struck. It 13:11 · will always look like the eyes follow you, but in this case, it's the whole 13:16 · world of light and shadow that's going to follow you. So, it's really very alive. And Rembrandt is a painter of 13:22 · that epiphany in the double sense. Both it's an epiphany of his person, his coming to light, and it's an epiphany 13:29 · because it's the light that does it all. Over 80 self-portraits by Rembrandt have 13:35 · survived. In these Barack selfies, the artist perfects his portrayal of light 13:41 · and poses in a wide variety of costumes from nobleman to beggar. Rembrandt's 13:48 · later self-portraits, they're brutal because they're so realistic. You know, 13:53 · if he's got a big nose because of drinking or if he's got yellow cheeks 13:58 · because his liver doesn't work anymore, or if it warts or whatever, he will paint it. He doesn't do any concession 14:05 · to reality as his philosophy was to really look at nature. So there is not a 14:11 · choice of making himself more beautiful because that means that you have to fantasize about something that isn't 14:18 · there. A stark contrast to his contemporary Petal Rubin's for example who although 14:24 · already over 60 stylizes himself as a youthful elegant artist. 14:30 · But is Rembrandt's honesty perhaps only an effect he plays with? 14:37 · Even if you come so close, you don't really know who Rembrandt is. He comes 14:44 · forward if you look at the painting as self-portrait as a fascinating person, but also he stays a mystery. 14:58 · The works themselves also raise questions. In recent decades, there have been repeated doubts about the 15:04 · authenticity of some of the paintings, such as the man with the gold helmet. Art historians subjected it to intensive 15:11 · analysis. In 1986, they published their sensational result, not an original 15:17 · Rembrandt. Don't apply quite so thickly. 15:25 · The light is here on the outermost edges. The scientists had noticed that the gold 15:30 · did not correspond to Rembrandt's usual painting style. Better. Yeah. The picture was probably painted by one 15:36 · of the more than 50 apprentices Rembrandt taught. 15:42 · In recent years, however, some new authentic Rembrandts have also come to light. The person responsible for that 15:49 · is Yan 6. I talk about him so much and I look at his work so much and every day 15:56 · he sort of bumps into my life. He's everpresent. So in a sort of an academic way or in a 16:03 · philosophical way I'm almost married to Rembrandt. Rembrandt is closely linked to Yansix's 16:09 · family history. One of his ancestors was a friend of the master. The first image I really remember is 16:16 · that little etching of Rembrandt sort of looking like that. And I think I tore it 16:22 · out age eight or nine and hung it in my room and he would always look at me and 16:28 · I from that very moment I loved it. While working for Sbees in London, Yan 6 16:34 · comes across a work by an alleged Rembrandt pupil in a catalog in 2007. 16:40 · Auction price £1,500. His client buys the painting. It later 16:46 · turns out to be a self-portrait by Rembrandt. In 2013, the Getty Museum in 16:52 · Los Angeles buys it for $16 million. 16:58 · [Music] And it is not the only time that Janix 17:03 · demonstrates his sensational instinct for Rembrandt's magic. Half of this biblical scene was painted over in the 17:10 · 19th century. Once again, Six believes he can detect the master's hand. 17:19 · I saw a catalog from a German auction house and I went to Cologne. I saw the 17:24 · real real painting and I saw that parts of it were was overpainted, but the 17:29 · figures in the background really looked original, especially that little boy looking out. 17:37 · And that face is really Rembrandt's face. So at that very moment, I decided 17:43 · for myself, this has to be by Rembrandt. 17:48 · This time, Yan 6 has to raise €1.5 million with an investor to buy the 17:54 · painting at auction. But the real adventure is just 17:59 · beginning. What lies beneath the painted over areas? An X-ray promises more 18:05 · figures painted by Rembrandt's hand. Should one dare to remove the upper layers, 18:12 · you see the X-ray, something is there. And so you ask the restorer, can you just take a little bit of the background 18:18 · away and then first they say, well, really? And then you say, yeah, yeah, try. So the first centimeters go off and 18:25 · the color comes out. And I remember because it was done in England. I remember they called us and they said, 18:31 · "There's color. There's You're right. There's color." And I said, "Continue." And they said, "It's so scary." And I said, "No, you have to do this because 18:38 · it's like Indiana Jones. It's it's like archaeology. It's an adventure." 18:45 · You can see in in the right side, this is halfway the restoration that the red color comes off and that the purple 18:51 · comes out. Also, you can see that the figure behind Christ is now gone. And 18:56 · the three figures that were showing on the X-ray are actually emerging. They're coming out. 19:02 · You can see halfway that the little boy is losing his dress and actually underneath a new body is emerging. 19:12 · I remember when these these naked bucks came out, you know, we were so excited and then we looked at each other and 19:18 · said, "Oh god, you know, somebody thought it was this was a bit strange to to paint the the naked bum of a young 19:26 · kid." But at the same time, it's so it's so natural. It's so real. I mean this 19:31 · this this the innocence of young children and of course Rembrandt understood the Bible so well and this 19:37 · whole story is about the innocence of the world and what is more innocent than a naked child. So in a way it started to 19:43 · make far more sense. Although the young Rembrandt only half completed his painting his pronounced 19:50 · ego and sense of humor are clearly visible. 19:57 · Verment positions himself above Jesus and he's looking at you. He's saying, "I 20:02 · did it. Here I am." So, it shows that he's very eager and he's very 20:08 · self-confident. And I love that because when you're in your 20s, early 20s, you know, when you can start driving a car 20:14 · and when you can do all sorts of grown-up stuff, you're ambitious, you're experimental, and you're always 20:21 · bluffing. You're always a bit too big for life. 20:26 · With this attitude, Rembrandt encounters an environment that offers him everything in abundance. When he sets 20:33 · foot in Amsterdam, the city is in its heyday. It is the golden age of the 20:38 · Netherlands, which becomes the dominant maritime and trading power in the middle of the 17th century. 20:46 · In Amsterdam, in particular, the riches of the world were quite literally piled up. Gold and ivory from Africa, tobacco 20:53 · and furs from North America, sugar and cocoa from South America, and pepper and nutmeg from Asia. 21:00 · The population of Amsterdam grows from 40,000 to 210,000 during Rembrandt's 21:06 · lifetime. Living quarters are created at lightning speed. The rich merchants 21:11 · invest in real estate. This is how the canal belt comes into being. The city 21:16 · literally bursts at the seams several times. [Music] 21:24 · Amsterdam is booming. Ordinary workers here earn twice as much in the mid- 17th 21:30 · century compared to those in Cologne, for example. Rembrandt is a child of his time, living 21:36 · it up with a paraw for extravagance. He was particularly fond of exotic objects 21:42 · from far away countries. Interestingly, Rembrandt's adult life 21:47 · coincides exactly with the height of the golden age. If there was ever an artist who was born at the right time in the 21:53 · right country, it was Rembrandt. 22:06 · Painters enjoy a high reputation in the city and Rembrandt relishes his growing 22:11 · popularity. The melting pot of Amsterdam provides him with new motifs every day. 22:17 · My name is Rembrandt. An estimated 5 million paintings were 22:23 · produced in the 17th century. And it's unique that at that time it 22:29 · wasn't just a small avanguard, an elite that was interested in contemporary art as is the case today, but broad sections 22:36 · of the population. 22:46 · Foreign visitors were always surprised that one could buy pictures at the market stalls in the Netherlands and the carpenters and butchers had pictures 22:53 · hanging at home. At that time, works of art were often 23:00 · even accepted as currency in Amsterdam. And in the pulsating world metropolis, 23:06 · the name Rembrandt soon ranks right at the top. 23:11 · Keep still, but I am holding still. Yes, too. 23:17 · Merchants like Martin Solmans, who had amassed fabulous wealth through trade, had themselves immortalized by the 23:23 · artist more and more often. For no one painted people like Rembrandt. 23:30 · With almost every Rembrandt portrait, you see something that is 23:35 · uncompromising. Sometimes you get a sense that it was production and the bills had to be paid, but almost always 23:41 · you get a sense that there is a new invention to be brought out. And 23:46 · Rembrandt is giving himself a challenge because that is how he sees art, at least the art that he makes 23:55 · by incorporating accessories. For example, Rembrandt also tells stories in his portraits and he makes up small 24:02 · actions that bring movement into the picture. A masterly trick. In this way, 24:08 · static poses become a lively snapshot that he captures on canvas. 24:18 · Martin Solmans is to marry Opian Copit, the wealthy daughter of a gunpowder merchant. The wedding painting of the 24:25 · two is to be more impressive than anything that has been done before. Until now, a life-siz painting was 24:32 · reserved for royalty. Many of his works have their explanation 24:40 · in his singular devotion to be being and performing the role of a great artist. 24:47 · Even a king couldn't get an audience with him and had to wait until he was ready and had finished what he was 24:53 · working on. In 2016, the wedding portraits of Martin 24:58 · and Opion become a sensation. After 400 years in private hands, they 25:04 · are offered on the market. France and Holland join forces and acquire the duo 25:09 · for 160 million. Now you can admire Martin and Orpion, sometimes in the 25:16 · Paris Lu and sometimes in Amsterdam's Reichkes Museum. The couple moves every 25:21 · 5 years. 25:26 · Petria Noble, senior conservator at the Reichkes Museum, was asked to assess the 25:32 · condition of the paintings before the purchase in the private chambers of the Rothschild family. The paintings hung in 25:40 · a bedroom with open doors onto the garden. There was a busy street not far away, you know, from the garden. So I 25:46 · think over the years there was actually a sort of a layer of sort of grimy soot that had accumulated on top of the 25:52 · paintings. Together with her team, Petri Noble freed the couple from centuries of 25:58 · yellowing, repaired damage, and restored them to their original appearance. [Music] 26:09 · It is precisely in the tiniest details that Rembrandt's genius and also his 26:14 · inventiveness is revealed. What is so stunning is that the general impression, you know, from a distance is 26:21 · that this is a real lace collar. I mean, it really gives you the impression that it is that he depicted that in a lot of 26:26 · detail, but in fact, when you get up close, it's nothing more than just little dabs and licks of black paint on 26:34 · top of this white layer. Contrary to what one would expect, 26:39 · Rembrandt did not paint white lace on a black background, but the other way round. He was a master of illusion who 26:46 · knew all the tricks and invented new ones. 26:53 · But he was unrivaled in capturing the essence of those he portrayed. 26:58 · [Music] The amazing thing is that you somehow 27:04 · believe that you're actually looking at the person. With other painters, they're often just lifeless mannequins. 27:12 · But with Rembrandt, you think you know the character of the person. Sometimes you have the feeling that they're still 27:18 · alive, that they could walk through the doorway at any moment. You can't really explain it. It remains somewhat 27:25 · mysterious. That person is really gazing and you 27:32 · really have a sense that something is going on because you get this interaction. He sort of hooks you in and 27:40 · he takes you along and that's quite rare for an artist. 27:47 · He portrays fear. He reveals melancholy. He actually lays bare everything known 27:52 · to human existence. In the Reichkes Museum, just a few 27:58 · meters away from Martin and Opion, is Petria Noble's new workplace. She is in 28:04 · charge of Operation Nightw Watch. Under this name, one of the most comprehensive 28:09 · restoration projects in art history began in July 2019. 28:14 · Rembrandt's monumental painting, his most famous work, the night watch, is 28:19 · being examined with unprecedented detail. 28:26 · The sheer size of the painting has meant an enormous amount of challenges 28:32 · involved in researching the painting, but also um just in simple things like 28:38 · how do you go about you know digital photography of such a large painting? How are you going to capture all those 28:43 · images? Ultra high resolution scans provide the basis for the restoration of Rembrandt's 28:50 · masterpiece, which will take years. It's the national painting, you could 28:56 · say. It's it's like it's in in the Reichkes Museum. It's it's hanging like 29:01 · the the top uh piece on an altar. It's like the temple of art. And the best 29:07 · piece in it is the night watch. 29:19 · I don't know if that is his best painting, but it doesn't really matter because it's clearly the greatest 29:25 · endeavor. It was really showing this is what I am capable of. And it's a pretty awesome big picture. 29:33 · the guard of Amsterdam who would otherwise be sitting kind of uh in a in 29:38 · a static portrait are suddenly coming up to us. The picture has this sense of 29:45 · momentariness. You can hear the gunfire. You can hear 29:50 · the drum beats. You can almost smell the guns. This image is highly sensorial. 29:58 · The illustrious group is typical of Rembrandt's time. a marksman's guild 30:03 · that provides security in Amsterdam as a vigilante group. The giant of art 30:09 · immortalized himself once again in this monumental work. 30:17 · [Music] Petria Noble is still impressed by Rembrandt's painting technique even 30:24 · after many years. He's using different kinds of tricks 30:31 · that any other artist does. You have two details of the painting right next to one another. Of course, the lieutenant 30:38 · built up in this really thick impasto in multiple layers. And uh when you get 30:43 · even closer, you can sort of see, you know, that he's really dorbed that paint 30:48 · on. I mean, under a microscope, it almost 30:53 · looks like ice cream. [Music] And right next to it, you have this 31:00 · really summery execution of the dog. The dog sort of is meant to kind of 31:07 · blend away in the background where the lieutenant is meant to come forward. That's how he builds the composition and 31:14 · creates that suggestion of depth in the painting. Few people know that the night watch was 31:19 · originally much larger when it was transferred to Amsterdam City Hall in 1715. 31:25 · Something happened that would be unimaginable today. It doesn't fit through the doors. So, the mayor has the 31:32 · work trimmed on all four sides. No one knows what these missing parts look 31:38 · like, but at least a copy of Rembrandt's masterpiece exists, made by the painter Garrett Lundons in 1650. It is the basis 31:46 · for a spectacular project. 31:54 · There are several things that are present in the Londons but missing in the night watch. Apparent difference is 32:02 · that on the night watch this figure here wearing the helmet has been cut off 32:07 · whereas in the Londons we see his arm back here. And in fact there are two 32:12 · missing figures. And if you look closely, there's even a little boy down here looking over the wall. 32:18 · The missing sections will be reconstructed with the help of deep learning algorithms. To do this, the 32:24 · technology is first fed hundreds of details from both images. I use this 32:30 · alignment between the London's and the Nightw Watch um to basically send the neural network 32:37 · to art school. So what you're seeing here in these examples is a little tile from the Londons and then the same tile 32:45 · from the Nightw Watch. And so this is basically a quiz that we're giving the neural network. We say, "All right, 32:52 · paint this like Rembrandt would paint it." Um, and this is its best guess. 32:59 · After hundreds of thousands of cycles, the missing parts of Rembrandt's Nightw Watch are then calculated from the data. 33:06 · And this is the result. 33:13 · So in here in the middle you see the nightw watch and then along the edges 33:19 · you can see the extension from the neural reconstruction. 33:30 · In this way, the museum creates a unique reconstruction of the night watch, which gives an idea of how Rembrandt probably 33:37 · really planned his work [Music] 33:43 · and it enables new insights, especially with regard to the positioning of the figures. 33:49 · [Music] open this strip of about 60 cm from the left 33:57 · side has a huge impact on the original composition. We get a greater sense of how Rembrandt use you know perspective 34:03 · in the painting. Um I mean the fact that we now have this the figure is holding 34:08 · on to this railing. I mean certainly you know lead you much more into the 34:14 · composition and there's much more of a sense that the figures are now not in the center of the painting but actually 34:19 · offc center. Since the additions were made by computer and not by Rembrandt's hand in 34:25 · the future the night watch will be displayed in the familiar form that enchants millions of visitors to the 34:31 · Reichkes Museum every year. [Music] 34:41 · When Rembrandt receives the commission for the Night Watch, he is 34 years old. 34:46 · He is at the height of his creative powers. Amsterdam's elite are at his feet. His marriage to Saskia has granted 34:53 · him a life of wealth. He acquires a stately home which he fills with art 34:58 · from all over Europe and his collection of historical and exotic exhibits. 35:09 · [Music] He captures this flight of fancy in a 35:15 · self-portrait. It shows him and Saskia as a couple who enjoy life. 35:21 · [Music] Rembrandt was sometimes criticized for 35:26 · his extravagance. For example, his wife Saska's relatives accused him of throwing money out of the window with 35:32 · both hands. Interestingly, he didn't deny this at all. He only said, "Yes, we can afford 35:38 · it because we've been so richly blessed by God Almighty with money and goods." 35:46 · Saskia's diary of 40,000 gilders was used up only a few years after the 35:51 · wedding. [Music] 35:57 · Rembrandt knew better than anyone, where there is light, there must be darkness. 36:06 · And the darkness that fell over his imposing house was long and gloomy. 36:15 · Saskia gave birth to three children. All three died after a few days or weeks. 36:21 · Then finally one son, Titos, survives. 36:29 · Look what papa's doing. Rembrandt, Tito scolds you. You should paint faster. 36:35 · Papa needs a bit of quiet. Their happiness is short-lived. Saskia 36:41 · dies at the age of only 30 when Tetus is one year old. 36:48 · The four pregnancies had taken their toll on her, and tuberculosis was most likely her death sentence. 37:00 · Saskia's death is the turning point in Rembrandt's life. His masterpiece, The 37:05 · Night Watch, is almost finished. He does not yet suspect it, but his glory days 37:11 · are over forever. [Music] 37:27 · Saskuke's death was a great shock to him. This is reflected on the one hand in the moving drawings he made of her in 37:33 · the last phase of her life, but also in the fact that he immediately fell into a deep creative crisis afterwards and 37:40 · painted almost nothing for 10 years. Stephanie Book and her colleagues at the 37:46 · copper plate etching museum in Dresdon are studying Saskia nearly 400 years after her death. Just as he was able to 37:54 · create a monumental painting like the night watch, Rembrandt also captured private details with great sensitivity. 38:02 · We are sitting in front of one of the most beautiful drawings by Rembrandt ever. At least it is one of the most 38:08 · beautiful for me. This is his wife Saskia. A very intimate format. 38:14 · His way of portraying life is so captivating. The way the pupil is positioned, the 38:20 · relationship between the nose and the corner of the mouth. These are just tiny dots, tiny little strokes. 38:30 · A spot of light on Saskia's head has aroused the interest of the researchers. 38:35 · Did Rembrandt subsequently correct the spontaneous sketch? A technical analysis might shed light on 38:42 · the matter. The valuable artwork is irradiated with different light wavelengths that do not damage the 38:49 · unique etching. [Music] 39:02 · In the infrared image, we could clearly see with very long wave light that this 39:07 · brightness around the face was in fact applied with a watery chalk so that he 39:12 · did not make a correction but added an additional source of light afterwards. 39:18 · This causes Saskia to naturally shine out of the picture more strongly. 39:25 · And it was obviously important for him to set this light again in this way. 39:33 · When it comes to lighting design, Rembrandt was the absolute master. Even today, camera technicians use his 39:40 · methods to set the scene for faces. As seen here in the interview with art historian Francisco Gotwalt and David 39:47 · Dvit, chief creator of the Rembrandt House in Amsterdam. 39:52 · [Music] When you look at his character studies 39:58 · and depictions of heads, it's often noticeable that the treatment of light 40:03 · or how light is depicted or how a head is illuminated 40:08 · seems unusual. [Music] 40:14 · Gotfeld and Vit wanted to find out how Rembrandt succeeded in creating atmosphere through the use of light. 40:21 · Even when he had to carve the motif into the metal plate with a needle, he mastered the play of light like no one 40:27 · else. For example, in this etching, the scientists discover something 40:33 · astonishing in connection with this piece. Rembrandt reveals the secret of how he influenced the light in his 40:39 · studio. with a fabric construction over the window. 40:49 · The cloth increases the diffusion of light in the room, making it softer and dispersed. 40:56 · But you can also see that these windows are blocked at the bottom. The aim is to have light from above, not only from the 41:03 · window, but also from above. In this way, the master creates a light 41:10 · that gently envelops his models. He uses light not only to create space, 41:18 · but also saw the potential of using light alone to create or bring out 41:23 · emotional states more intensely. 41:30 · After Saskia's death, Rembrandt withdrew from the world. His stubbornness and 41:35 · undiplomatic nature meant that he hardly received any more commissions in the following years. Court records tell of 41:42 · ever greater financial problems. He spends more time in nature. Now 41:49 · the etchings when you look at them the first time, you do think that a lot of it is just dark scribble. Sometimes 41:55 · there's nothing but darkness. And if you allow yourself to look just a little bit longer, all of a sudden, bam, you see 42:02 · it's not all dark. [Music] 42:08 · There are an incredible number of things to discover in this landscape. On the one hand, these windmills that we can 42:15 · recognize, of course, but also lots of people. We have a farmer and a farmer's 42:20 · wife. Then we have a draftsman on the horizon on the right. 42:27 · And we have a very mysterious pair in the foreground, perhaps lovers. 42:35 · Rembrandt's contemplation of nature has always been directed towards the human and even the very human. 42:46 · His cander shocks [Music] 42:52 · his nudes vex his contemporaries. [Music] 42:59 · The print is famous for the fact that it was also criticized for being so candid when people in the academy thought that 43:05 · one had to follow norms and rules. And here, for example, you can see the imprint that garters make and that was 43:12 · simply not considered appropriate for a nude. This is a corporality that simply 43:18 · reminds us that bodies are like that. Whether that's brutally honest is something you have to think about 43:24 · because who is being coseted when we look in the mirror in the morning? We're not coseted either. So it's a detail 43:31 · that brings the vitality of life itself into the etchings. [Music] 43:38 · Rembrandt has not lost his sense of humor even as a widowerower, nor has he lost his knack for telling stories. 43:47 · [Music] At the back in the distance, you can see 43:53 · a reaper cutting the grain. This means that we as viewers know that of course this burst of passion will probably be 44:00 · over quickly when they are discovered. The artistic obscenities fit in with the 44:07 · sllovenly life Rembrandt leads in the eyes of Amsterdam society. For years, he had a love affair with a nurse Ha who 44:14 · raised his son Titos and he made promises of marriage to her. Imagine 44:22 · that this is all water here. You're standing in water. In water. 44:29 · Splash. Splash. Splash. When he turns to the prettier and younger maid, Henrika, who also 44:35 · frequently models for him, things come to a head. [Music] 44:46 · Oh, Rembrandt, the other side, too. 44:52 · The Jeda sues Rembrandt and wins alimony in court. He takes revenge and has her 44:59 · locked away for 5 years in a women's penitentiary. [Music] 45:08 · Ketch is the dark chapter in Rembrandt's life. If we look at his behavior today, 45:14 · even if we take into account the standards of his time, we have to conclude that the same person who 45:19 · created such tremendously sensitive works of art could be harsh and unforgiving in his personal life. 45:28 · But Hrik stays with Rembrandt. She becomes the second important woman at his side. Together they have another 45:35 · daughter, Cornelia. 45:41 · Henrikish. Henrikishtoffles was a very simple woman who couldn't even read and write properly. But she must have been very 45:48 · astute because when Rembrandt had to declare bankruptcy in 1656, 45:53 · Henrikia founded an art trading company and took Rembrandt on as an employee so 45:58 · that he could concentrate entirely on his art. And that is how his legendary late work came about. 46:07 · The late Rembrandt artworks break with the conventions of the time. He scales everything down to the essential, 46:13 · radical and modern from today's point of view. 46:20 · Rem works very intensively with individual blobs of color and sometimes 46:26 · he simply makes use of our brain's ability to complete something that's not even there. He even emits some things 46:33 · and we still know that it's a hand that is the crease of an arm because we complete the picture ourselves. So he's 46:40 · concerned with showing a state of mind or showing a state of being and somehow 46:45 · conveying that to us. That's ultimately something that modern painting especially impressionism picks up on 46:51 · later. The art critics of his time despised this way of painting. But Rembrandt's 46:58 · way of painting points far into the future. 47:06 · Can artificial intelligence copy the genius? An advertising agency commissioned computer scientists to 47:12 · teach algorithms to paint like Rembrandt? To do this, they had their computers analyze all 340 of Rembrandt's 47:20 · paintings. It is true that Rembrandt is kind of the pop star of Dutch arts and culture and 47:27 · the Dutch masters and we could have gone with Van Gogh maybe as well. But the the important thing with Rembrandt is 47:32 · there's a lot of data available. The AI drew its conclusions from 47:39 · millions of data. What does a Rembrandt nose look like? How far away are the 47:44 · cheekbones from the eyes? The algorithms analyzed the facial parts and then 47:49 · created their own work. [Music] 47:57 · The biggest challenge remained how to print Rembrandt's voluminous color application on a canvas, sometimes with 48:04 · centime thick layers of paint. The technicians mastered this hurdle as well 48:09 · and developed their own printing process. 48:21 · The result was presented to the public and to an extremely skeptical art scene as the next Rembrandt. 48:30 · [Music] 48:36 · One reaction was quite outspoken which was I would be the antichrist of the art 48:42 · world. And there's a very famous Rembrandt expert who actually came and 48:47 · who had his uh magnifying glass and he looked at the painting and he said this 48:53 · is prostitution of Rembrandt. Do we want as humans compete with AI 49:00 · when it comes to art or is that is that meant for humans and is this just to 49:06 · help create new and more beautiful things? And I think it's the latter. 49:14 · What would the master himself have thought? If Rembrandt were to see the recreated 49:20 · Rembrandt today, he would probably grab his brush and fix it. 49:27 · Rimbrandt survives his son Titos and Henrika, the woman who stood by him even without a marriage certificate. Both 49:34 · died of the plague which raided twice in Amsterdam between 1660 and 1670. 49:40 · In the end, he lives a secluded and lonely life with only his daughter Cornelia looking in on him from time to 49:47 · time. [Music] 49:53 · His contemporaries did not know what to make of his painting style. 49:59 · [Music] There is a strong sense that Rembrandt 50:04 · himself knew that he was painting in order to be timeless in not a 50:11 · metaphysical sense but like in a historical sense timeless in this sense that his work will always look fresh 50:20 · deep into the future. But I do think that the more and more we start to understand more about ourselves, about 50:26 · our own ego and about our own position in life and how we treat reality, we 50:32 · start to understand more and more about Rembrandt. Uh I think he was just light 50:37 · years ahead in observing. But still, even if you know him so well, 50:43 · if you come so close, he stays a mystery. 50:48 · Heat. [Music] 51:04 · Heat. [Music] 51:23 · [Music] 51:48 · [Music]
Which is why mine has two. By George Rembrandt Johnson.
I don't think he was Dutch though.
Almost looked like a 3D photograph.
I have stood before Rembrandt’s NIGHTWATCH and it is truly astounding.
"Freezeland." That gave me a giggle. I once had a landlady who was from Friesland. She was a sterling example of why the Dutch have a world-wide reputation for being the most miserly bastages on earth.
The Dutch Masters really were masterful. Like Rembrandt, a number of them inspired "How did he do that?"
Vermeer's paintings don't show any brush strokes. That in itself is not so extraordinary because other paintings developed their own techniques for leaving no brush strokes, but most of them only used the trick on occasion. Vermeer always used it, which begs the question, why would he go to the trouble? Most painters use brush strokes as a tool to give the impression of texture or depth. Van Gogh sometimes would squirt the paint straight from the tube onto the canvas to get those same effects, but not Vermeer. For whatever reason, he chose to forego the use of that tool, so there must have been a reason why. And therein lies the mystery.
The Rembrandt museum in Amsterdam is worth the visit. Loved seeing his studio, with shelves filled with artifacts from seashells to armor to a stuffed armadillo, all sorts to use as props in his paintings.
Thank you for this post. Post more.