Self-Portrait with Saskia
Rembrandt (Rembrandt van Rijn), 1636
About this artwork
In 1636, two years after his marriage to Saskia van Uylenburgh, Rembrandt van Rijn created this intimate etching, the only one depicting the couple together and their sole formal double portrait in any medium. A master of the Baroque style, Rembrandt captures a moment of domestic happiness during a peak of professional success in Amsterdam. Dressed in fanciful 16th-century costumes—Rembrandt in a plumed beret and fur-trimmed coat, Saskia in an old-fashioned veil—they evoke Netherlandish portrait traditions while symbolizing enduring marital love. Rembrandt asserts his identity as an artist by holding a porte-crayon, a tool for drawing implements, blending personal tenderness with professional pride. This etching showcases his early mastery of printmaking, using varied line work to achieve painterly effects like rich tonal gradations and textures, rivaling the depth of his oils. A gift to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1917 from Henry Walters, this rare print offers a window into Rembrandt's life and his innovative etching techniques, making it a treasured highlight in the Drawings and Prints department.