Rembrandt, the Printmaker

Rembrandt, the Printmaker
#Exhibitions
Rembrandt van Rijn, Self-Portrait in Soft Hat and Embroidered Cloak, 1631 | Courtesy © National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo

With Rembrandt the Etcher: His Challenges and His Impact, the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo devotes an exhibition to Rembrandt as a printmaker, placing the language of printmaking at the centre of the investigation as a space of experimentation and circulation of ideas. Scheduled for Summer 2026 in the galleries of the Ueno museum, the project focuses on a decisive aspect of Rembrandt van Rijn’s work, often considered secondary to painting but in fact crucial to his reputation already during his lifetime. Through a focused selection of etchings, engravings and drypoints, the exhibition highlights the freedom with which Rembrandt approached printmaking. The Dutch artist treated the copper plate as an open field, repeatedly reworking the matrix, varying impressions and exploiting light, shadow and the depth of the line in unconventional ways. In his prints, even more than in his paintings, Rembrandt pushed experimentation to radical outcomes, embracing imperfections and revisions as integral parts of the final image. The exhibition also reflects on the long-term impact of this practice. Rembrandt’s prints circulated widely across Europe, influencing fellow printmakers and collectors and helping to redefine printmaking as an autonomous medium rather than a subordinate one. His prints combine close observation of reality, psychological introspection and a freedom of expression that anticipates modern sensibilities. Within the context of the National Museum of Western Art, which has long been committed to the study and presentation of European prints, the exhibition offers a concise and critical reading of Rembrandt as a printmaker. It presents an artist for whom printmaking was not a secondary pursuit but a privileged field of research, still capable of questioning the relationship between image, technique and vision.
Paolo Mastazza - © 2025 ARTE.it for Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo