circa 1650
Oil on canvas
Gemaldegalerie - Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Germany.
“The Man with the Golden Helmet” by Circle of Rembrandt is masterful artwork that had previously categorized as a work by Rembrandt for many years.
Doubts were expressed as to its provenance in 1984 by a Dutch curators’ commission specifically created to investigate Rembrandt’s works of questionable authenticity.
Essential details in the painting’s style did not match the style of Rembrandt’s known works. It is now believed to have been painted by one an unknown Rembrandt student or someone in his close circle.
These artworks of questionable authenticity have been labeled as created by the “Circle of Rembrandt.”
The Man with the Golden Helmet has his head turned slightly to the right, and his eyes are cast down. He wears a dark coat with purplish-red sleeves and a martial metal collar as protection around his shoulders.
Most distinctly he wears a richly wrought golden helmet with ear-pieces and a plume of short white and red feathers.
The background is dark, but an intense light falls from the left to the top of his gleaming metal helmet. The sitter has been identified as Rembrandt’s brother Adriaen, but this identification is not very probable.
Rembrandt’s brother did not live in Amsterdam and had died a few years before this painting was created.
This picture has always been popular over many years due to the beautifully wrought helmet that was probably more ornamental rather than for combat. Also, the pensive expression of the man hints to a mysterious backstory that is left to our imaginations.
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