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Smith College Museum of Art FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Smith College Museum of Art Announces A Transformative Gift of Two Rembrandt Prints Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn. Dutch, 1606–1669. The Three Crosses, Christ Crucified Between the Two Thieves, ca. 1660. Drypoint and burin printed in black, third state of five. Gift of Mary Gordon Roberts, class of 1960, in honor of the 55th reunion of her class Northampton, MA February 9, 2018 — The Smith College Museum of Art is pleased to announce that it has received a transformative gift from Mary Gordon Roberts (Smith class of 1960) of two impressions of one of Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn’s most famous prints, The Three Crosses, Christ Crucified Between the Two Thieves. These two prints will add significantly to SCMA’s ability to study and share information on the working methods of one of the most influential printmakers in the history of western European art. The prints join Mrs. Roberts’ 2010 gift to SCMA, George Bellows’ oil painting, Pennsylvania Excavation (1907). Her gifts have been made in honor of the class of 1960. Her generosity to Smith embodies a favorite exhortation of her father Albert H. Gordon, a Smith trustee from 1960 to 1970: “Remember your roots.” (Continued)
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Smith College Museum of Art

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Smith College Museum of Art Announces

A Transformative Gift of Two Rembrandt Prints

Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn. Dutch, 1606–1669. The Three Crosses, Christ Crucified Between the Two Thieves, ca. 1660. Drypoint and burin printed in black, third state of five. Gift of Mary Gordon Roberts, class of 1960, in honor of the 55th reunion of her class

Northampton, MA February 9, 2018 — The Smith College Museum of Art is pleased to announce that it has received a transformative gift from Mary Gordon Roberts (Smith class of 1960) of two impressions of one of Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn’s most famous prints, The Three Crosses, Christ Crucified Between the Two Thieves.

These two prints will add significantly to SCMA’s ability to study and share information on the working methods of one of the most influential printmakers in the history of western European art. The prints join Mrs. Roberts’ 2010 gift to SCMA, George Bellows’ oil painting, Pennsylvania Excavation (1907). Her gifts have been made in honor of the class of 1960.

Her generosity to Smith embodies a favorite exhortation of her father Albert H. Gordon, a Smith trustee from 1960 to 1970: “Remember your roots.”

(Continued)

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Mrs. Roberts’s gift includes impressions of the third and fifth states of the composition, both of which are very rare. This important gift joins an impression of the fourth state already in the SCMA collection, which was purchased in 1911 by the Smith Studio Club, a student group.

The ability to compare different states of a print allows viewers to consider the artist’s goals for the work of art, and the techniques used to communicate those goals. Rembrandt’s The Three Crosses represents a high water mark in what different states of a print can tell us.

Rembrandt intensively worked and reworked the composition of The Three Crosses, experimenting with different types of paper, vellum and inking variations. Four versions, or “states,” of The Three Crosses were produced during Rembrandt’s lifespan, with a fifth state printed after the artist’s death.

It was not until the third state that Rembrandt considered his print formally completed as his signature affirms. Solely created in drypoint, a print technique which allows for only a limited number of impressions, Rembrandt did something very bold; instead of destroying his copper plate after it started to wear down, he decided to rework the composition completely by adding and erasing figures in the scene. The most evident compositional changes are found between the third and fourth states.

There are only twenty-two documented impressions of the third state of The Three Crosses. Compositionally, the third state seems to reflect the moment before darkness ensues; a bright light is cast on Christ and his mourners as well as on the penitent thief. By way of contrast, the impenitent thief’s face recedes in darkness.

The fifth and last state, which compositionally is the same as the fourth, is also uncommon, and its history is somewhat mysterious. After Rembrandt’s death his copper etching plates were sold to various printmakers and art dealers in Amsterdam. Apparently, the plate for The Three Crosses was acquired by the obscure printmaker Frans Carelse, who re-printed impressions after adding his own name to the plate.

The rare juxtaposition of the last three states of the print will offer students and the public an extraordinary opportunity to gain a far more intimate appreciation of Rembrandt’s artistic process. SCMA will initiate exploration of these prints with a Rembrandt Study day, which will include a public lecture, in April 2018. The specific details will be announced at a later date.

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SMITH COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART

SCMA is widely recognized as one of the leading academic museums in the nation, contributing meaningfully to Smith College’s mission to educate women of promise for lives of distinction and purpose. Housed in state-of-the-art museum facilities within the Brown Fine Arts Center, SCMA’s collection, numbering more than 26,000 artworks, spans from antiquity to the present and supports learning across the college’s curriculum. Additionally, SCMA is a valued resource for the broader community, attracting an average of 36,000 visitors each year, including more than 3,000 students from regional schools. SCMA mounts a dynamic schedule of changing exhibitions and a wide variety of public programs. These range from lectures and gallery talks to family-friendly community days and a free monthly program for all ages from 4 to 8 p.m. on Second Fridays that features hands-on art making and guided gallery conversations. The museum’s current major exhibition, 体 Modern Images of the Body from East Asia, (February 2–August 26, 2018) looks at the multifaceted representations of the body in East Asia from the nineteenth century to the present.

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AVAILABLE IMAGES (high resolution and web-ready)

Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn. Dutch, 1606–1669. The Three Crosses, Christ Crucified Between the Two Thieves, ca. 1660. Drypoint and burin printed in black, third state of five. Gift of Mary Gordon Roberts, class of 1960, in honor of the 55th reunion of her class Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn. Dutch, 1606–1669. The Three Crosses, Christ Crucified Between the Two Thieves, ca. 1660. Drypoint and burin printed in black, fourth state of five. Gift of The Studio Club and Friends Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn. Dutch, 1606–1669. The Three Crosses, Christ Crucified Between the Two Thieves, 1660 (printed posthumously, ca. 1669). Drypoint and burin printed in black, fifth state of five. Gift of Mary Gordon Roberts, class of 1960, in honor of the 55th reunion of her class Detail of Frans Carelse’s signature on the fifth posthumous state of The Three Crosses, Christ Crucified Between the Two Thieves Media contact: Margi Caplan, [email protected]

Follow SCMA

smith.edu/artmuseum

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