Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Verkörperung – Entkörperung bei Rembrandt

View through CrossRef
Abstract This article analyzes the painterly formation of pictorial subjects of embodiment and disembodiment since the early modern period. Starting with Gerhard Richter, Quattrocento painters, and Titian, it focuses on Rembrandt and his late group portrait The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Deijman (1656). The subject of this picture is a dissection of a man’s brain – and hence the surgeons’ search for the seat of the human soul and the motion of life. In the motif of the corpse, Rembrandt performs a radical operation with paint layers that historical sources described with the terms “doodverwe” and “lyffverwe” (“dead color” and “body color”). Rembrandt’s pictorial formation is a distinctly complex answer to the soulless, lifeless corpse’s state of being, which has been reduced to no more than an image. At the same time, the dead body is the place in which Rembrandt reflects the act of painting as a way of working with the tension of embodiment and disembodiment, of giving and taking life, with color.
Title: Verkörperung – Entkörperung bei Rembrandt
Description:
Abstract This article analyzes the painterly formation of pictorial subjects of embodiment and disembodiment since the early modern period.
Starting with Gerhard Richter, Quattrocento painters, and Titian, it focuses on Rembrandt and his late group portrait The Anatomy Lesson of Dr.
Deijman (1656).
The subject of this picture is a dissection of a man’s brain – and hence the surgeons’ search for the seat of the human soul and the motion of life.
In the motif of the corpse, Rembrandt performs a radical operation with paint layers that historical sources described with the terms “doodverwe” and “lyffverwe” (“dead color” and “body color”).
Rembrandt’s pictorial formation is a distinctly complex answer to the soulless, lifeless corpse’s state of being, which has been reduced to no more than an image.
At the same time, the dead body is the place in which Rembrandt reflects the act of painting as a way of working with the tension of embodiment and disembodiment, of giving and taking life, with color.

Related Results

Rembrandts eerste Amsterdamse periode
Rembrandts eerste Amsterdamse periode
In 1925 W. Martin published Pieter Lastman's painting Coriolanus and the Roman Women (Dublin, Trinity College). He read the date as 1622, which is stated in all subsequent publicat...
Ary Scheffer, een Nederlandse Fransman
Ary Scheffer, een Nederlandse Fransman
AbstractAry Scheffer (1795-1858) is so generally included in the French School (Note 2)- unsurprisingly, since his career was confined almost entirely to Paris - that the fact that...
De bijzondere iconografie van Rembrandts Bileam
De bijzondere iconografie van Rembrandts Bileam
AbstractThe iconography of the biblical story of Balaam and the she-ass, told in Numbers 22-24, dates right back to the early Christian era. It depicts the confrontation of Balaam ...
Rembrandts eerste reis naar Friesland
Rembrandts eerste reis naar Friesland
AbstractOn at least three occasions (in 1633, 1634 and in 1635) Rembrandt visited the village of Sint Annaparochie in Het Bildt, where Saskia Uylenburgh lived from her fourteenth t...
Almost Gone: Rembrandt and the Ends of Materialism
Almost Gone: Rembrandt and the Ends of Materialism
This essay looks to Rembrandt’s late religious portrait The Apostle Bartholomew (1661) for a counterpoint to the affirmative materialism characteristic of much criticism today, a t...
Malariafälle bei Airline-Crews: Kasuistiken und Konsequenzen für die Prophylaxe
Malariafälle bei Airline-Crews: Kasuistiken und Konsequenzen für die Prophylaxe
ZUSAMMENFASSUNGBei Reisen in Tropenregionen sind neben Touristen auch Piloten und Flugbegleiter weltweit operierender Fluggesellschaften einem Malariarisiko ausgesetzt. Insgesamt g...
Rembrandt was here
Rembrandt was here
Abstract In 1911 visitors to the Amsterdam house where Rembrandt lived between 1639 and 1658 were disappointed to find no working studio, bedroom or personal collect...
Metrische Metronomangaben bei Max Reger?
Metrische Metronomangaben bei Max Reger?
Die sogenannte metrische Tempotheorie, wonach historische Pendel- und Metronomangaben als Doppelschläge zu interpretieren sind, wurde erstmals 1974 von Erich Schwandt zur Dikussion...

Back to Top