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Rembrandt ‘fake’ abandoned in museum basement 40 years ago is likely real, investigation finds

Leading Rembrandt experts previously claimed that painting was produced after artist’s death

Adam White
Monday 31 August 2020 07:50 EDT
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'Head of a Bearded Man', c. 1630, oil on oak panel, from the workshop of Rembrandt van Rijn
'Head of a Bearded Man', c. 1630, oil on oak panel, from the workshop of Rembrandt van Rijn (Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford)

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A “fake” Rembrandt, which was left in a museum basement for nearly 40 years after it was deemed inauthentic, may in fact be real.

Head of a Bearded Man was bequeathed to Oxford’s Ashmolean museum in 1951, but was consigned to the museum’s basement when a leading Rembrandt authority decided it was an imitation.

The Rembrandt Research Project, which viewed the painting in 1981, argued that it was likely drawn by an imitator long after Rembrandt’s death.

Ahead of a Rembrandt retrospective at the museum, curator An Van Camp decided to have the painting re-examined.

“[The painting] is what Rembrandt does,” she told The Guardian. “He does these tiny head studies of old men with forlorn, melancholic, pensive looks. It is very typical of what Rembrandt does in Leiden around 1630.”

A dendrochronologist soon established that the wood panel on which the work was painted stemmed from the same tree used for Rembrandt’s Andromeda Chained to the Rocks. It was also likely to have been painted between 1620 and 1630 – around 30 years before his death.

While the Ashmolean has yet to determine whether Rembrandt himself painted the piece, it was most certainly painted in the artist’s workshop. More investigations will soon take place.

Head of a Bearded Man is on display at the museum’s reopened Young Rembrandt exhibition, which closed in March amid the early lockdown of venues, art galleries and museums.

Young Rembrandt is at the Ashmolean in Oxford until 1 November.

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