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ISBN: HB: 9780300105810

Yale University Press

January 2006

320 pp.

28.5x24.5 cm

20 colour illus., 150 black&white illus.

HB:
£75,00
QTY:

Willem Drost (1633-1659)

A Rembrandt Pupil in Amsterdam and Venice

Willem Drost was one of Rembrandt's most gifted pupils, and he is also considered one of the most mysterious. This book, the first ever devoted to this exceptional artist, unravels many of the mysteries of Drost's life and career. Curator and art historian Jonathan Bikker offers not only new archival evidence of the artist's date and place of death but also a new assessment of Drost's place in the Rembrandt workshop and in the Venetian art world of the mid-seventeenth century. Drost emerges as one of Rembrandt's most talented imitators and, despite his short career, an artist with a variety of faces. The book features a meticulously researched and fully illustrated catalogue raisonne with 38 paintings now attributed to Drost (several formerly attributed to Rembrandt) and 35 other paintings today known only from old sale catalogues or reproductions. The author also discusses 32 paintings he rejects as Drost's work.

Reviews

"Bikker's finely produced volume is unique in being the first book about this exceptional artist... [It is] invaluable... erudite... engrossing and meticulously researched" – Byron Ireland, Day by Day

"[A] meticulous monograph... this well-illustrated book offers new knowledge and original scholarship that is fundamental to understanding both Drost and Rembrandt and, perhaps better, that grey area in between... Yale have done a handsome job of presenting material that has such rich implications for anyone interested in Rembrandt scholarship. In the process, Jonathan Bikker has at last given Drost, a neglected and significant painter, his own rightful place in art history" – Larry Silver, The Art Book