Bathsheba_at_Her_Bath_(Rembrandt)

<i>Bathsheba at Her Bath</i> (Rembrandt)

Bathsheba at Her Bath (Rembrandt)

Oil painting by Rembrandt


Bathsheba at Her Bath (or Bathsheba with King David's Letter) is an oil painting by the Dutch artist Rembrandt (1606–1669), finished in 1654.

Quick Facts Bathsheba at Her Bath, Artist ...

A depiction that is both sensual and empathetic, it shows a moment from the Old Testament story related in 2 Samuel 11 in which King David sees Bathsheba bathing and, entranced, impregnates her.[1] In order to marry Bathsheba and conceal his sin, David sends her husband into battle and orders his generals to abandon him, leaving him to certain death.

While the scene of David spying on Bathsheba had been painted by earlier artists, Rembrandt's depiction differs in its tight pictorial focus and erotic vitality, achieved through broad, thick brushstrokes and vibrant coloration.

The painting hangs in The Louvre; it is one of 583 works donated by Dr. Louis La Caze in 1869.[2] For Kenneth Clark, the canvas is "Rembrandt's greatest painting of the nude".[3] Its insight into Bathsheba's moral dilemma has been described as "one of the great achievements of western painting."[4]

Biblical account and variation

Rembrandt, The Toilet of Bathsheba, 1643, Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Second Book of Samuel (11:2-4) gives the account of King David who saw a woman bathing from his palace roof. When he asked after her, he was told that she was Bathsheba, daughter of Eliam and wife of Uriah the Hittite. David had his messengers retrieve her, and after they slept together she became pregnant with his child. David was able to marry Bathsheba by sending Uriah into battle where he was killed.[1]

Prior to Bathsheba at Her Bath, the standard treatment had been to show Bathsheba bathing out of doors—thus accounting for her visibility to David—and accompanied by maidservants. A tower could usually be seen in the distance, and perhaps a small figure of David, sometimes accompanied by his two courtiers. Such was the design Rembrandt's earlier The Toilet of Bathsheba, dated 1643.[1] By eliminating David, his messengers and most of the traditional narrative elements from the picture—the only anecdotal references included are the letter from David (not actually mentioned in Samuel) and the presence of an attendant drying her foot—Rembrandt's presentation of Bathsheba is both intimate and monumental.[1] As a result, the moralistic theme of previous treatments of the subject is replaced by a direct eroticism in which the viewer supplants David as voyeur.[5]

Willem Drost, Bathsheba with David's Letter, 1654.

The work is painted as life sized and in a shallow space, with Bathsheba dominating the composition as she had in no other earlier version of the scene.[6] It is not known whether Rembrandt painted Bathsheba for his own reasons, or to satisfy a commission.[1] Presumably in response to Rembrandt's painting, his ex-pupil and close associate Willem Drost painted Bathsheba with David's Letter the same year, which is also in the Louvre.

Composition

Apart from the lack of anecdotal devices, the painting is unusual in other ways. Bathsheba is presented in a space that is difficult to read. The dark background is suggestive of night, while a massive column implies a large architectural structure.[1] Behind her lies a passage of richly painted drapery composed of browns and ochers that impart a golden warmth. Around her rests a thickly painted background of white chemise; set against this her naked flesh stands out for its solid form and the sumptuous application of paint.[6][7] The paint used to describe her figure is richly nuanced, its broad brushstrokes and strong highlights impart a vibrant tactile quality to the body, rendering her presence palpable.[8]

Bathsheba at Her Bath is a reinterpretation of two antique reliefs familiar to Rembrandt through engravings.[3][9] A print by Tobias Stimmer may have been influential, as it includes the pillar, a curtain drawn across the background and Bathsheba's downcast gaze.[10] It was begun around 1647 and altered and repainted until its completion in 1654.[11] Originally the canvas may have been larger and of a vertical format. It might have been trimmed some ten centimeters at the left and at least 20 centimeters in height; It is speculated that Rembrandt cut the canvas himself in order to intensify the impact of the figure.[12] X-radiographs show that at some point late in the painting process, he lowered Bathsheba's head from its initial more upward angle, thereby increasing the sense of the figure's withdrawal into reverie.[13] Initially she appeared to be looking out of the corner of her eye, as if watching David; in the present version her gaze is softened, in the general direction of her maid but focused on no particular object, imparting a feeling of solemnity and contemplation. There was no letter in her hand in the original conception,[12] and it is also possible that her lap, thighs, and right arm were once draped.[11]

A Woman Bathing in a Stream, 1655, National Gallery, London, was painted by Rembrandt at about the same time as Bathsheba and shares a similar spirit of intimacy.[13]

Despite its classical references, the characterization of the figure is unconventional, and the depictions of her large stomach, hands and feet are derived from observation rather than respect for the idealised form.[14] Alternatively, art historian Eric Jan Sluijter proposed that the figure could not have been painted directly from a posed model, given the anatomical discrepancies (an impossibly twisted left arm, the length of the right arm, an unnatural twist of the torso, and the elongated distance from breast to groin) and inconsistencies in perspective that indicate different parts of the figure are viewed from various vantage points.[15] Yet, the figure appears to repose naturally, without tension or movement.[16] Whatever physical awkwardness the figure may possess when compared to classical sources, the truthfulness of her image has been seen as extraordinarily noble; according to Clark, "this Christian acceptance of the unfortunate body has permitted the Christian privilege of a soul".[17]

The letter shown in her right hand contains a demand from David for her to choose between fidelity to her husband or obedience to her king, and is an anecdotal catalyst for her introspection.[13][18] In representing this moment, Rembrandt extrapolated from the biblical text, which treated Bathsheba incidentally while focusing on David's sinfulness.[13] As a result, her expression is profound enough to suggest not only her sense of resignation, but the broader narrative as well.[17] As a conception of the nude figure suffused with complexity of thought, Bathsheba at Her Bath is nearly unique in art.[17][19]

Model

The traditionally accepted identification of the model is of Rembrandt's partner Hendrickje Stoffels, who would have been 28 at the time of the painting. Sluijter has proposed otherwise, stating that the likeness is of an ideal type used by Rembrandt over a long period.[20] Assuming Stoffels as the model, medical researchers have observed deformity in the left breast, and have offered various hypotheses including breast cancer, abscess due to tuberculosis and lactation mastitis following an unsuccessful pregnancy.[21] The diagnosis of breast cancer is unlikely, given that Stoffels lived for another nine years.[22]

In "The medical enigma of Rembrandt's Bathsheba" Paolo Zamboni professor of Vascular Surgery University of Ferrara, solves the mystery of the model's breast. According to Zamboni the model was effected by thrombophlebitis of a superficial vein of the breast, a condition described by Mondor in 1939. So not mastitis or carcinoma, as believed for centuries. This diagnosis became real thanks to the analysis of a Zamboni patient's right breast after confirmed by an ultrasound check. As proof, mammography was negative for both cancer and mastitis, confirming the validity of the diagnosis on canvas proposed by Paolo Zamboni. [23] [24][25][26]

The look of sorrow in the subject's face has been interpreted as evidence of Stoffels' illness and pregnancy (she gave birth to a daughter in October 1654),[27] Rembrandt's difficulties with the Church stemming from his cohabitation with Stoffels, and the artist's impending bankruptcy.[21] An alternative hypothesis for the model's identity has suggested that Stoffels' head was placed on the body of another model,[22] which is consistent with the result derived from x-rays that Bathsheba's head had been repainted.

Edgar Degas, Woman Having her Hair Combed, c. 1885, is reminiscent of Rembrandt's painting.[28]
Frédéric Bazille, La Toilette, 1870

Artistic responses

Allusions to Bathsheba at Her Bath have been noted in the works of 19th- and 20th-century artists. It is thought to have inspired The Surprised Nymph (1859–61), an early figure by Édouard Manet that playfully references old master sources.[29] Edgar Degas' pastel Woman Having Her Hair Combed (c. 1885) has been compared to Bathsheba for similarities in the model's attitude;[28] Degas' father was an acquaintance of Louis La Caze, who owned Bathsheba prior to bequeathing it to the Louvre in 1869.[30][31]

Frédéric Bazille recalled Bathsheba in his La Toilette, painted for the 1870 Paris Salon. Similar in size and format, Bazille's work shares some of the mood of the Rembrandt: according to critic Dianne Pitman, "not the unfolding of a specific narrative but the interplay of sensual effect and solemnity, blending realistic intimacy and dignified remoteness".[32] A 1963 print by Picasso, Seated Nude and Another Figure, refers to the overtly voyeuristic properties of Bathsheba.[33]

The painting and its attempted theft forms the subject of "This One Goes to Eleven", a third-season episode of the Canadian television detective series Murdoch Mysteries.

The painting was depicted in the film Entrapment, where it was stolen by art thief Virginia "Gin" Baker (Catherine Zeta-Jones), but stolen from her by another art thief Robert "Mac" MacDougal (Sean Connery).

See also


Notes

  1. Bull et al. 151
  2. Bathsheba at Her Bath Archived May 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. Louvre. Retrieved on 2008-05-03.
  3. Clark, 341
  4. Bull, 153
  5. Sluijter, 354-360
  6. Sluijter, 354
  7. Bull et al. 151–152
  8. Sluijter, 357–358
  9. Sluijter, 355
  10. Sluijter, 354-355
  11. Sluijter, 353
  12. Sluijter, 352
  13. Bull et al. 152
  14. Clark, 341–342
  15. Sluijter, 356–357
  16. Sluijter, 357
  17. Clark, 342
  18. Lawrence Gowing thought otherwise, viewing the painting less as a treatment of the biblical story than as evidence of affection between the artist and his model. Gowing, 436
  19. Bull et al. 152–153
  20. Sluijter, 358
  21. Braithwaite, PA; Shugg, D (1983). "Rembrandt's Bathsheba: the dark shadow of the left breast". Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. 65 (5): 337–8. PMC 2494383. PMID 6351705.
  22. Bourne, R.G. "Did Rembrandt's Bathsheba really have breast cancer?" Aust. N.Z. J. Surg. (2000) 70, 231-232. See Bourne's reference to a Russian journal article regarding other hypotheses as to the model's identity.
  23. Zamboni, Paolo (2020). "The medical enigma of Rembrandt's Bathsheba". Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis. 18 (6): 1268–1270. doi:10.1111/jth.14801. PMID 32346960. S2CID 216646378.
  24. Corriere della Sera Corriere Salute, pp. 10 e 11 Giovedì 18 Giugno 2020
  25. Crenshaw, 42
  26. Boggs et al. 451–452
  27. Cachin, Françoise, et al. Manet. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1983. Pp. 83-86. ISBN 0-87099-349-6
  28. Boggs et al. 412
  29. The first recorded sale of the work took place in 1811 in London.
  30. Pitman, Dianne W. Bazille: purity, pose, and painting in the 1860s. Penn State Press, 1998. Pp. 171–72. ISBN 0-271-01700-7
  31. Schama, Simon, Rembrandt's Ghost. The New Yorker, March 26, 2007. Retrieved April 29, 2010.

References

Further reading

  • Adams, Ann Jensen (ed.) (1998). Rembrandt's Bathsheba Reading King David's Letter. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Bathsheba_at_Her_Bath_(Rembrandt), and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.