Saturday, July 20, 2013

Russian protest leader Navalny sentenced to five years in jail

KIROV, Russia (Reuters) - A Russian judge sentenced protest leader Alexei Navalny to five years in prison on Thursday after convicting him of large-scale theft in a trial Navalny said was politically motivated.

Navalny, one of President Vladimir Putin's biggest critics, hugged his wife and shook his father's hand before he was led away from court handcuffed to a law enforcement officer.

The sentence was immediately denounced by rights activists and Kremlin critics, many of whom say the trial was part of a clampdown on dissent in Putin's third presidential term. Prosecutors had asked for six years.

Navalny, who emerged from rallies against Putin last year as the opposition's most dynamic leader, was convicted of organizing the theft of timber worth more than 16 million roubles ($494,400) while advising the Kirov governor in 2009.

Judge Sergei Blinov said there was no extenuating circumstances that would warrant keeping Navalny out of prison with a suspended sentence, and that he could not be "corrected" without being isolated from society.

Russian shares fell after the sentence was issued. ($1 = 32.3644 Russian roubles)

(Reporting by Gabriela Baczynska; Writing by Steve Gutterman, Editing by Elizabeth Piper)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russian-protest-leader-navalny-found-guilty-theft-052131600.html

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Apple increases chip orders in preparation for new iPad, iPhone release

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U.S. 'deeply disappointed' at Russian opposition leader conviction

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A White House spokesman said on Thursday the United States is "deeply disappointed and concerned" at the conviction of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and called on Russia to allow an appeal and cease pressure on anti-corruption activists.

"Navalny's harsh prison sentence is the latest example of a disturbing trend aimed at suppressing dissent in civil society in Russia," White House spokesman Jay Carney said at a briefing.

Carney said charges of embezzlement against Navalny were "politically motivated," adding that the case reinforces U.S. concerns about the rule of law in Russia.

"We urge Russia to allow for a fair and impartial appeal of the verdict," Carney said.

Navalny was sentenced on Thursday to five years in jail for theft, an unexpectedly tough punishment. Pyotr Ofitserov, Navalny's co-defendant, was convicted as an accomplice and sentenced to four years in prison.

Navalny gained prominence as an anti-graft blogger and had submitted documents to register as a candidate for the Moscow mayoral election in September. He has also expressed presidential ambitions.

He had been accused of embezzling funds from a state timber company in 2009. He denies any wrongdoing.

Carney's condemnation of Russia's handling of the case comes as the United States hopes to win Russian cooperation in securing the return of former U.S. spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, who revealed details of U.S. government surveillance programs.

U.S. authorities have charged Snowden with theft of government property, unauthorized communication of national defense information and willful communication of classified communications intelligence to an unauthorized person.

Snowden has been stranded at a Moscow airport since June 23. He has filed an application for temporary asylum in Russia, although the 30-year-old American has said he wants eventually to travel to Latin America.

The United States has asked Russia to expel Snowden, but Russia has so far refused to do so. U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin have spoken by phone about the matter as recently as Friday.

In response to questions from journalists, the White House this week has deliberately left vague whether Obama will attend talks in Moscow with Putin ahead of a St. Petersburg summit in September with leaders of the Group of 20 nations.

(Reporting by Mark Felsenth; editing by Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-deeply-disappointed-russian-opposition-leader-conviction-193045954.html

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

#SciAmBlogs Wednesday - surviving climate catastrophe, HIV vaccine, pipetting Twitter instruction, and more.


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Bora Zivkovic Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz. Bora Zivkovic Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz.

#SciAmBlogs Wednesday ? surviving climate catastrophe, HIV vaccine, pipetting Twitter instruction, and more.

Bora Zivkovic About the Author: Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

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International Shipholding Corporation Announces Dates for Second Quarter 2013 Earnings Release and Conference Call

MOBILE, Ala.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

International Shipholding Corporation (ISH) today announced that it will release its second quarter earnings results following the close of the market on Wednesday, July 31, 2013, and will host a conference call to discuss the results at 10:00 AM ET on Thursday, August 1, 2013.

The conference call will feature members of the Company?s management team, including Niels M. Johnsen, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Erik L. Johnsen, President, and Manuel G. Estrada, Chief Financial Officer. To participate in the conference call, please dial (888)-455-2296 (domestic) or (719)-325-2435 (international). Participants can reference the International Shipholding Corporation Second Quarter 2013 Earnings Call or passcode 3208673. Please dial in approximately 5 minutes prior to the call.

The conference call will also be available via a live listen-only webcast and can be accessed through the Investor Relations section of the Company?s website, www.intship.com. Please allow extra time prior to the call to visit the Company?s website and download any software that may be needed to listen to the webcast.

A replay of the conference call will be available through August 9, 2013 at (877) 870-5176 (domestic) or (858) 384-5517 (international). The passcode for the replay is 3208673.

About International Shipholding

International Shipholding Corporation, through its subsidiaries, operates a diversified fleet of U.S. and International Flag vessels that provide worldwide and domestic maritime transportation services to commercial and governmental customers primarily under medium to long-term charters and contracts.

For more information about the company, please visit www.intship.com.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/international-shipholding-corporation-announces-dates-201500215.html

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Local Restaurant Owner Uses Facebook to Track Down Thief

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa - It was captured all on camera.

The security footage behind Riley's Cafe on 1st Avenue shows a woman walking through the back door last Friday, taking bags out, and then putting them into her vehicle. Riley's owner Richard Pankey told us on Monday that those bags were filled with around $2,200 worth of new power tools.

But instead of filing a police report, Pankey posted the surveillance pictures to Facebook, offering a cash reward for information on the woman. Pankey told us on Monday, that same woman contacted him with an interesting explanation.

"She called me and said, 'I'm the person you're looking for, and you have to know that I was set up,'" Pankey said.

He said she told him that one of his staff members, a cook, had instructed her to pick up the tools.

"She did the right thing," Pankey added.

As of Monday morning, Pankey had still not gotten the tools back, but he said the next step would be to file an official report with police, and fire the individual responsible.

Source: http://www.kcrg.com/news/local/Local-Restaurant-Owner-Uses-Facebook-to-Track-Down-Thief-215702581.html

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REFILE-Banks check Chinese walls as Hannam appeal reveals cracks

Tue Jul 16, 2013 8:52am EDT

* Banker's appeal shows how easily information can leak

* Makes banks more wary of possible conflicts of interest

* Outcome of appeal key to success of regulatory crackdown

By Kirstin Ridley

LONDON, July 16 (Reuters) - The name of the top London banker fighting to overturn a fine for market abuse is coming up in conversations between lawyers and their clients, who are asking: "Is this a Hannam?".

Extra caution over potential conflicts of interest within corporate broking is what Britain's much criticised financial regulator hoped for when it imposed a 450,000 pound ($667,400)penalty on JPMorgan dealmaker Ian Hannam last year.

Ironically, it is Hannam's appeal to overturn the fine and restore his reputation as a powerful dealmaker that has laid bare the ease with which bankers can casually leak potentially market-moving information and made the industry wary.

If the 57-year-old former special forces soldier succeeds in persuading a tribunal that he did not pass on inside information, banking veterans might breathe a sigh of relief.

But the case, which has been delayed until October, is prompting companies to look closely at their Chinese walls.

A Chinese wall is a set of rules aimed at preventing those with sensitive information, for example a banker working on a company merger, from passing it on to others who could profit from it.

"I think more care is being taken to formalise wall crossing, and not to assume the recipient of the information knows the score," said Rob Moulton at UK law firm Ashurst.

The case against Hannam, whose multi-billion-dollar deals transformed Britain's blue-chip share index, does not question his integrity, but seeks to draw a line in the grey area of what constitutes acceptable business conduct.

It also tests the ability of the three-month-old Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to rein in lax controls and, where possible, target high profile individuals. The watchdog was spun out of a predecessor blamed for failing to halt risk-taking that helped fuel the financial crisis and misselling scandals.

"I have now had clients ask me: 'Is this a Hannam sort of case?' when considering whether they are allowed to take someone over the wall, and to that extent, the publicity will have helped FCA's broader agenda," Moulton adds.

BE BORING

The Hannam case hinges on two emails he sent in 2008 to Iraqi Kurdistan's oil minister Ashti Hawrami on behalf of a client, Heritage Oil, which the regulator alleges included potential inside information.

Hannam, who quit his job last year to fight the allegations, says the emails were too imprecise, and possibly inaccurate, to constitute insider information.

"I either made it up or was putting a spin on it to get a meeting," Hannam said of one email at the London tribunal earlier this month.

Hannam also argues that Hawrami, a former geologist, was an insider anyway - while conceding that formal insider lists were "not necessarily" kept at early stages of deals.

Financial advisers and law firms are required to keep lists of those who know price-sensitive information. But some lawyers say that in the heat of a deal, such rules are easily breached.

So they are advising clients to be thorough and, when it comes to price-sensitive information, ensure they create records that show who knew what when - and do it "the boring way".

"Whatever the outcome of these proceedings, those engaged in financial dealings ... will wish to consider much more carefully both their duties and obligations under the rule book," said James Carlton of law firm Fox Williams, adding that the Hannam case showed the FCA would no longer tolerate "what many have considered to be a very grey area for many years".

The FCA, armed with fresh powers to hold bankers and institutions to account, is increasingly intrusive and hardline.

It is asking more questions and ramping up demands for skilled persons reports, when companies are forced to pay for FCA-appointed independent experts to spot check or monitor their behaviour - with the added threat of publicity. One lawyer branded these Section 166 orders a "corporate arrest".

The FCA says the market is at last taking notice. Regulatory data on suspicious share price moves ahead of UK mergers and acquisition announcements has been a potential measure of how endemic misconduct such as insider dealing is in London.

That rate, which had doggedly remained at 20 to 30 percent for years, slid to a record low of 14.9 percent in 2012.

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/mergersNews/~3/v50fRGsr7qc/story01.htm

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Xamarin Raises $16M Series B Round Led By Lead Edge Capital, Passes 20,000 Paid Developer Seats

403300_283149085067752_703581224_nXamarin, the cross-platform development platform for native apps for iOS, Android, OS X and Windows, today announced that it has closed an opportunistic $16 million Series B round led by Lead Edge Capital. The company’s Series A investors Charles River Ventures, Ignition Partners and Floodgate also participated in this round. In total, including the $12 million Series A round, Xamarin has now raised $28 million. The company, which focuses strongly on making mobile app development easier for enterprises, also today announced that its developer community has now grown to over 350,000 members and includes 20,000 paid developer seats. The company is clearly on a roll right now. Earlier this year, Xamarin hosted its first developer conference, which quickly sold out, and launched a number of innovative products, including it’s new mobile UI testing platform. As Xamarin’s CEO Nat Friedman told me, the company plans to use the funding to increase investment in its developer platform, “particularly in pre-built component and apps to help developers build great apps faster,” and its Test Cloud. Xamarin also plans to double its sales team by the end of this year. ?In the very near future, every business process and customer interaction will happen on a mobile device,? Friedman, said in a statement today. ?Xamarin?s unique approach of enabling businesses to rapidly deliver fully native apps for multiple device platforms has resulted in incredible revenue growth and market momentum. This success, combined with this opportunistic Series B round, provides the foundation for exponential future growth for the company.? He also told me that the company was approach by investors, but the driving motivation behind closing this round was “to position Xamarin to dominate the mobile development market.” The company, he argues, is growing significantly faster that its competitors and “augmenting that success with an additional round pours more fuel on the fire.”

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/3kyo4qxzyco/

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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Google Doodle celebrates Rembrandt's 407th birthday

Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (Dutch pronunciation:?[?r?mbr?nt ???rm?(n)so?n v?n ?r?in], 15?July 1606[1]?? 4?October 1669) was a Dutch painter and etcher. He is generally considered one of the greatest painters and printmakers in European art history and the most important in Dutch history.[2] His contributions to art came in a period of great wealth and cultural achievement that historians call the Dutch Golden Age, when Dutch Golden Age painting, although in many ways antithetical to the Baroque style that dominated Europe, was extremely prolific and innovative.

Having achieved youthful success as a portrait painter, Rembrandt's later years were marked by personal tragedy and financial hardships. Yet his etchings and paintings were popular throughout his lifetime, his reputation as an artist remained high,[3] and for twenty years he taught many important Dutch painters.[4] Rembrandt's greatest creative triumphs are exemplified especially in his portraits of his contemporaries, self-portraits and illustrations of scenes from the Bible. His self-portraits form a unique and intimate biography, in which the artist surveyed himself without vanity and with the utmost sincerity.[2]

In his paintings and prints he exhibited knowledge of classical iconography, which he molded to fit the requirements of his own experience; thus, the depiction of a biblical scene was informed by Rembrandt's knowledge of the specific text, his assimilation of classical composition, and his observations of Amsterdam's Jewish population.[5] Because of his empathy for the human condition, he has been called "one of the great prophets of civilization."[6]

Rembrandt[7] Harmenszoon van Rijn was born on 15?July 1606 in Leiden,[1] in the Dutch Republic, nowadays the Netherlands. He was the ninth child born to Harmen Gerritszoon van Rijn and Neeltgen Willemsdochter van Zuytbrouck.[8] His family was quite well-to-do; his father was a miller and his mother was a baker's daughter. As a boy he attended Latin school and was enrolled at the University of Leiden, although according to a contemporary he had a greater inclination towards painting; he was soon apprenticed to a Leiden history painter, Jacob van Swanenburgh, with whom he spent three years. After a brief but important apprenticeship of six months with the famous painter Pieter Lastman in Amsterdam, Rembrandt opened a studio in Leiden in 1624 or 1625, which he shared with friend and colleague Jan Lievens. In 1627, Rembrandt began to accept students, among them Gerrit Dou.[9]

In 1629, Rembrandt was discovered by the statesman Constantijn Huygens, the father of Christiaan Huygens (a famous Dutch mathematician and physicist), who procured for Rembrandt important commissions from the court of The Hague. As a result of this connection, Prince Frederik Hendrik continued to purchase paintings from Rembrandt until 1646.[10]

At the end of 1631 Rembrandt moved to Amsterdam, then rapidly expanding as the new business capital of the Netherlands, and began to practice as a professional portraitist for the first time, with great success. He initially stayed with an art dealer, Hendrick van Uylenburg, and in 1634, married Hendrick's cousin, Saskia van Uylenburg.[11] Saskia came from a good family: her father had been lawyer and burgemeester (mayor) of Leeuwarden. When Saskia, as the youngest daughter, became an orphan, she lived with an older sister in Het Bildt. Rembrandt and Saskia were married in the local church of St.?Annaparochie without the presence of Rembrandt's relatives.[12] In the same year, Rembrandt became a burgess of Amsterdam and a member of the local guild of painters. He also acquired a number of students, among them Ferdinand Bol and Govert Flinck.[13]

In 1635 Rembrandt and Saskia moved into their own house, renting in fashionable Nieuwe Doelenstraat. In 1639 they moved to a prominent house (now the Rembrandt House Museum) in the Jodenbreestraat in what was becoming the Jewish quarter; the mortgage to finance the 13,000 guilder purchase would be a primary cause for later financial difficulties.[13] Rembrandt should easily have been able to pay the house off with his large income, but it appears his spending always kept pace with his income, and he may have made some unsuccessful investments.[14] It was there that Rembrandt frequently sought his Jewish neighbors to model for his Old Testament scenes.[15] Although they were by now affluent, the couple suffered several personal setbacks; their son Rumbartus died two months after his birth in 1635 and their daughter Cornelia died at just three weeks of age in 1638. In 1640, they had a second daughter, also named Cornelia, who died after living barely over a month. Only their fourth child, Titus, who was born in 1641, survived into adulthood. Saskia died in 1642 soon after Titus's birth, probably from tuberculosis. Rembrandt's drawings of her on her sick and death bed are among his most moving works.[16]

During Saskia's illness, Geertje Dircx was hired as Titus' caretaker and nurse and also became Rembrandt's lover. She would later charge Rembrandt with breach of promise and was awarded alimony of 200 guilders a year.[13] Rembrandt worked to have her committed for twelve years to an asylum or poorhouse (called a "bridewell") at Gouda, after learning she had pawned jewelry that had once belonged to Saskia and that he had given to her.

In the late 1640s Rembrandt began a relationship with the much younger Hendrickje Stoffels, who had initially been his maid. In 1654 they had a daughter, Cornelia, bringing Hendrickje a summons from the Reformed Church to answer the charge "that she had committed the acts of a whore with Rembrandt the painter". She admitted this and was banned from receiving communion. Rembrandt was not summoned to appear for the Church council because he was not a member of the Reformed Church.[17] The two were considered legally wed under common law, but Rembrandt had not married Henrickje, so as not to lose access to a trust set up for Titus in the son's mother's will.[16]

Rembrandt lived beyond his means, buying art (including bidding up his own work), prints (often used in his paintings), and rarities, which probably caused a court arrangement to avoid his bankruptcy in 1656, by selling most of his paintings and large collection of antiquities. The sale list survives and gives us a good insight into Rembrandt's collections, which apart from Old Master paintings and drawings included busts of the Roman Emperors, suits of Japanese armor among many objects from Asia, and collections of natural history and minerals; the prices realized in the sales in 1657 and 1658 were disappointing.[18] Rembrandt was forced to sell his house and his printing-press and move to more modest accommodation on the Rozengracht in 1660.[19] The authorities and his creditors were generally accommodating to him, except for the Amsterdam painters' guild, who introduced a new rule that no one in Rembrandt's circumstances could trade as a painter. To get round this, Hendrickje and Titus set up a business as art-dealers in 1660, with Rembrandt as an employee.[20]

In 1661 Rembrandt (or rather the new business) was contracted to complete work for the newly built city hall, but only after Govert Flinck, the artist previously commissioned, died without beginning to paint. The resulting work, The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis, was rejected and returned to the painter; the surviving fragment is only a fraction of the whole work.[21] It was around this time that Rembrandt took on his last apprentice, Aert de Gelder. In 1662 he was still fulfilling major commissions for portraits and other works.[22] When Cosimo?III de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany came to Amsterdam in 1667, he visited Rembrandt at his house.[23]

Rembrandt outlived both Hendrickje, who died in 1663, and Titus, who died in 1668, leaving a baby daughter. He died within a year of his son, on October?4, 1669 in Amsterdam, and was buried in an unmarked grave in the Westerkerk.[24][25]

In a letter to Huyghens, Rembrandt offered the only surviving explanation of what he sought to achieve through his art: the greatest and most natural movement, translated from de meeste en de natuurlijkste beweegelijkheid. The word "beweechgelickhijt" is also argued to mean "emotion" or "motive." Whether this refers to objectives, material or otherwise is open to interpretation; either way, critics have drawn particular attention to the way Rembrandt seamlessly melded the earthly and spiritual.[26]

Earlier 20th century connoisseurs claimed Rembrandt had produced over 600 paintings, nearly 400 etchings and 2,000 drawings.[27] More recent scholarship, from the 1960s to the present day (led by the Rembrandt Research Project), often controversially, has winnowed his oeuvre to nearer 300 paintings.[28] His prints, traditionally all called etchings, although many are produced in whole or part by engraving and sometimes drypoint, have a much more stable total of slightly under?300.[29] It is likely Rembrandt made many more drawings in his lifetime than 2,000, but those extant are more rare than presumed.[30] Two experts claim that the number of drawings whose autograph status can be regarded as effectively "certain" is no higher than about?75, although this is disputed. The list was to be unveiled at a scholarly meeting in February?2010.[31]

At one time about ninety paintings were counted as Rembrandt self-portraits, but it is now known that he had his students copy his own self-portraits as part of their training. Modern scholarship has reduced the autograph count to over forty paintings, as well as a few drawings and thirty-one etchings, which include many of the most remarkable images of the group.[32] Some show him posing in quasi-historical fancy dress, or pulling faces at himself. His oil paintings trace the progress from an uncertain young man, through the dapper and very successful portrait-painter of the 1630s, to the troubled but massively powerful portraits of his old age. Together they give a remarkably clear picture of the man, his appearance and his psychological make-up, as revealed by his richly weathered face.[33]

In a number of biblical works, including The Raising of the Cross, Joseph Telling His Dreams and The Stoning of Saint Stephen, Rembrandt painted himself as a character in the crowd. Durham suggests that this was because the Bible was for Rembrandt "a kind of diary, an account of moments in his own life."[34]

Among the more prominent characteristics of Rembrandt's work are his use of chiaroscuro, the theatrical employment of light and shadow derived from Caravaggio, or, more likely, from the Dutch Caravaggisti, but adapted for very personal means.[35] Also notable are his dramatic and lively presentation of subjects, devoid of the rigid formality that his contemporaries often displayed, and a deeply felt compassion for mankind, irrespective of wealth and age. His immediate family?his wife Saskia, his son Titus and his common-law wife Hendrickje?often figured prominently in his paintings, many of which had mythical, biblical or historical themes.

Periods, themes and styles[link]

Throughout his career Rembrandt took as his primary subjects the themes of portraiture, landscape and narrative painting. For the last, he was especially praised by his contemporaries, who extolled him as a masterly interpreter of biblical stories for his skill in representing emotions and attention to detail.[37] Stylistically, his paintings progressed from the early "smooth" manner, characterized by fine technique in the portrayal of illusionistic form, to the late "rough" treatment of richly variegated paint surfaces, which allowed for an illusionism of form suggested by the tactile quality of the paint itself.[38]

A parallel development may be seen in Rembrandt's skill as a printmaker. In the etchings of his maturity, particularly from the late 1640s onward, the freedom and breadth of his drawings and paintings found expression in the print medium as well. The works encompass a wide range of subject matter and technique, sometimes leaving large areas of white paper to suggest space, at other times employing complex webs of line to produce rich dark tones.[39]

It was during Rembrandt's Leiden period (1625?1631) that Lastman's influence was most prominent. It is also likely that at this time Lievens had a strong impact on his work as well.[40] Paintings were rather small, but rich in details (for example, in costumes and jewelry). Religious and allegorical themes were favored, as were tronies.[40] In 1626 Rembrandt produced his first etchings, the wide dissemination of which would largely account for his international fame.[40] In 1629 he completed Judas Repentant, Returning the Pieces of Silver and The Artist in His Studio, works that evidence his interest in the handling of light and variety of paint application, and constitute the first major progress in his development as a painter.[41]

During his early years in Amsterdam (1632?1636), Rembrandt began to paint dramatic biblical and mythological scenes in high contrast and of large format (The Blinding of Samson, 1636, Belshazzar's Feast, c.?1635 Dana?, 1636), seeking to emulate the baroque style of Rubens.[42] With the occasional help of assistants in Uylenburgh's workshop, he painted numerous portrait commissions both small (Jacob de Gheyn?III) and large (Portrait of the Shipbuilder Jan Rijcksen and his Wife, 1633, Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp, 1632).[43]

By the late 1630s Rembrandt had produced a few paintings and many etchings of landscapes. Often these landscapes highlighted natural drama, featuring uprooted trees and ominous skies (Cottages before a Stormy Sky, c.?1641, The Three Trees, 1643). From 1640 his work became less exuberant and more sober in tone, possibly reflecting personal tragedy. Biblical scenes were now derived more often from the New Testament than the Old Testament, as had been the case before. In 1642 he painted The Night Watch, the most notable of the important group portrait commissions which he received in this period, and through which he sought to find solutions to compositional and narrative problems that had been attempted in previous works.[44]

In the decade following the Night Watch, Rembrandt's paintings varied greatly in size, subject, and style. The previous tendency to create dramatic effects primarily by strong contrasts of light and shadow gave way to the use of frontal lighting and larger and more saturated areas of color. Simultaneously, figures came to be placed parallel to the picture plane. These changes can be seen as a move toward a classical mode of composition and, considering the more expressive use of brushwork as well, may indicate a familiarity with Venetian art (Susanna and the Elders, 1637?47).[45] At the same time, there was a marked decrease in painted works in favor of etchings and drawings of landscapes.[46] In these graphic works natural drama eventually made way for quiet Dutch rural scenes.

In the 1650s, Rembrandt's style changed again. Colors became richer and brush strokes more pronounced. With these changes, Rembrandt distanced himself from earlier work and current fashion, which increasingly inclined toward fine, detailed works. His singular approach to paint application may have been suggested in part by familiarity with the work of Titian, and could be seen in the context of the then current discussion of 'finish' and surface quality of paintings. Contemporary accounts sometimes remark disapprovingly of the coarseness of Rembrandt's brushwork, and the artist himself was said to have dissuaded visitors from looking too closely at his paintings.[48] The tactile manipulation of paint may hearken to medieval procedures, when mimetic effects of rendering informed a painting's surface. The end result is a richly varied handling of paint, deeply layered and often apparently haphazard, which suggests form and space in both an illusory and highly individual manner.[49]

In later years biblical themes were still depicted often, but emphasis shifted from dramatic group scenes to intimate portrait-like figures (James the Apostle, 1661). In his last years, Rembrandt painted his most deeply reflective self-portraits (from 1652 to 1669 he painted fifteen), and several moving images of both men and women (The Jewish Bride, c.?1666)?in love, in life, and before God.[50][51]

Etchings[link]

Rembrandt produced etchings for most of his career, from 1626 to 1660, when he was forced to sell his printing-press and virtually abandoned etching. Only the troubled year of 1649 produced no dated work.[52] He took easily to etching and, though he also learned to use a burin and partly engraved many plates, the freedom of etching technique was fundamental to his work. He was very closely involved in the whole process of printmaking, and must have printed at least early examples of his etchings himself. At first he used a style based on drawing, but soon moved to one based on painting, using a mass of lines and numerous bitings with the acid to achieve different strengths of line. Towards the end of the 1630s, he reacted against this manner and moved to a simpler style, with fewer bitings.[53] He worked on the so-called Hundred Guilder Print in stages throughout the 1640s, and it was the "critical work in the middle of his career", from which his final etching style began to emerge.[54] Although the print only survives in two states, the first very rare, evidence of much reworking can be seen underneath the final print and many drawings survive for elements of it.[55]

In the mature works of the 1650s, Rembrandt was more ready to improvise on the plate and large prints typically survive in several states, up to eleven, often radically changed. He now uses hatching to create his dark areas, which often take up much of the plate. He also experimented with the effects of printing on different kinds of paper, including Japanese paper, which he used frequently, and on vellum. He began to use "surface tone," leaving a thin film of ink on parts of the plate instead of wiping it completely clean to print each impression. He made more use of drypoint, exploiting, especially in landscapes, the rich fuzzy burr that this technique gives to the first few impressions.[56]

His prints have similar subjects to his paintings, although the twenty-seven self-portraits are relatively more common, and portraits of other people less so. There are forty-six landscapes, mostly small, which largely set the course for the graphic treatment of landscape until the end of the 19th century. One third of his etchings are of religious subjects, many treated with a homely simplicity, whilst others are his most monumental prints. A few erotic, or just obscene, compositions have no equivalent in his paintings.[57] He owned, until forced to sell it, a magnificent collection of prints by other artists, and many borrowings and influences in his work can be traced to artists as diverse as Mantegna, Raphael, Hercules Segers, and Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione.

[edit] Night Watch

Rembrandt painted The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq between 1640 and 1642. This picture was called the Nachtwacht by the Dutch and the Night Watch by Sir Joshua Reynolds because by the 18th century the picture was so dimmed and defaced by time that it was almost indistinguishable and it looked quite like a night scene. After it was cleaned, it was discovered to represent broad day?a party of musketeers stepping from a gloomy courtyard into the blinding sunlight.

The piece was commissioned for the new hall of the Kloveniersdoelen, the musketeer branch of the civic militia. Rembrandt departed from convention, which ordered that such genre pieces should be stately and formal, rather a line-up than an action scene. Instead he showed the militia readying themselves to embark on a mission (what kind of mission, an ordinary patrol or some special event, is a matter of debate).

Contrary to what is often said, the work was hailed as a success from the beginning. Parts of the canvas were cut off (approximately 20% from the left hand side was removed) to make the painting fit its new position when it was moved to Amsterdam town hall in 1715; the Rijksmuseum has a smaller copy of what is thought to be the full original composition; the four figures in the front are at the centre of the canvas. The painting is now in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.[58]

In 1968 the Rembrandt Research Project was started under the sponsorship of the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Scientific Research; it was initially expected to last a highly optimistic ten years. Art historians teamed up with experts from other fields to reassess the authenticity of works attributed to Rembrandt, using all methods available, including state-of-the-art technical diagnostics, and to compile a complete new catalogue raisonn? of his paintings. As a result of their findings, many paintings that were previously attributed to Rembrandt have been removed from their list, although others have been added back.[59] Many of those removed are now thought to be the work of his students.

One example of activity is The Polish Rider, in New York's Frick Collection. Its authenticity had been questioned years before by several scholars, led by Julius Held. Many, including Dr.?Josua Bruyn of the Foundation Rembrandt Research Project, attributed the painting to one of Rembrandt's closest and most talented pupils, Willem Drost, about whom little is known. The Frick itself never changed its own attribution, the label still reading "Rembrandt" and not "attributed to" or "school of". More recent opinion has shifted in favor of the Frick, with Simon Schama in his 1999 book Rembrandt's Eyes, and a Rembrandt Project scholar, Ernst van de Wetering (Melbourne Symposium, 1997) both arguing for attribution to the master. Many scholars feel that the execution is uneven, and favour different attributions for different parts of the work.[60]

Another painting, Pilate Washing His Hands, is also of questionable attribution. Critical opinion of this picture has varied since 1905, when Wilhelm von Bode described it as "a somewhat abnormal work" by Rembrandt. Scholars have since dated the painting to the 1660s and assigned it to an anonymous pupil, possibly Arent de Gelder. The composition bears superficial resemblance to mature works by Rembrandt but lacks the master's command of illumination and modeling.[61]

The attribution and re-attribution work is ongoing. In 2005 four oil paintings previously attributed to Rembrandt's students were reclassified as the work of Rembrandt himself: Study of an Old Man in Profile and Study of an Old Man with a Beard from a US private collection, Study of a Weeping Woman, owned by the Detroit Institute of Arts, and Portrait of an Elderly Woman in a White Bonnet, painted in 1640.[62]

Rembrandt's own studio practice is a major factor in the difficulty of attribution, since, like many masters before him, he encouraged his students to copy his paintings, sometimes finishing or retouching them to be sold as originals, and sometimes selling them as authorized copies. Additionally, his style proved easy enough for his most talented students to emulate. Further complicating matters is the uneven quality of some of Rembrandt's own work, and his frequent stylistic evolutions and experiments.[63] As well, there were later imitations of his work, and restorations which so seriously damaged the original works that they are no longer recognizable.[64] It is highly likely that there will never be universal agreement as to what does and what does not constitute a genuine Rembrandt.

"Rembrandt" is a modification of the spelling of the artist's first name that he introduced in 1633. Roughly speaking, his earliest signatures (ca. 1625) consisted of an initial?"R", or the monogram "RH" (for Rembrant Harmenszoon; i.e.?"Rembrant, the son of Harmen"), and starting in 1629, "RHL" (the "L" stood, presumably, for Leiden). In 1632, he used this monogram early in the year, then added his patronymic to it, "RHL-van Rijn", but replaced this form in that same year and began using his first name alone with its original spelling, "Rembrant". In 1633 he added?a?"d", and maintained this form consistently from then on, proving that this minor change had a meaning for him (whatever it might have been). This change is purely visual; it does not change the way his name is pronounced. Curiously enough, despite the large number of paintings and etchings signed with this modified first name, most of their documents that mentioned him during his lifetime retained the original "Rembrant" spelling. (Note: the rough chronology of signature forms above applies to the paintings, and to a lesser degree to the etchings; from 1632, presumably, there is only one etching signed "RHL-v. Rijn," the large-format "Raising of Lazarus,"?B?73).[65] His practice of signing his work with his first name, later followed by Vincent van Gogh, was probably inspired by Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo who, then as now, were referred to by their first names alone.[66]

A letter published in 2004 by Margaret S. Livingstone, professor of neurobiology at Harvard Medical School, suggests that Rembrandt, whose eyes failed to align correctly, suffered from stereo blindness.[67] This conclusion was made after studying 36 of Rembrandt's self-portraits. Because he could not form a normal binocular vision, his brain automatically switched to one eye for many visual tasks. This disability could have helped him to flatten images he saw, and then put it onto the two-dimensional canvas. Livingstone theorized that this was an advantage for the painter: "Art teachers often instruct students to close one eye in order to flatten what they see. Therefore, stereo blindness might not be a handicap?and might even be an asset?for some artists."[68]

It is known that Rembrandt ran a large workshop and had many pupils. His fame was such that important dignitaries visiting Amsterdam wished to buy pieces, and he was more than willing to comply if he could. The list of Rembrandt pupils from his period in Leiden as well as his time in Amsterdam is quite long, mostly because his influence on painters around him was so great that it is difficult to tell whether someone worked for him in his studio or just copied his style for patrons eager to acquire a Rembrandt. A partial list should include[69]Ferdinand Bol, Adriaen Brouwer, Gerrit Dou, Willem Drost, Heiman Dullaart, Gerbrand van den Eeckhout, Carel Fabritius, Govert Flinck, Hendrick Fromantiou, Arent de Gelder, Samuel Dirksz van Hoogstraten, Abraham Janssens, Godfrey Kneller, Philip de Koninck, Jacob Levecq, Nicolaes Maes, J?rgen Ovens, Christopher Paudi?, Willem de Poorter, Jan Victors, and Willem van der Vliet.

The most notable collections of Rembrandt's work are at Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum, including De Nachtwacht (The Night Watch) and Het Joodse bruidje (The Jewish Bride), The Hague's Mauritshuis, Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, the National Gallery, London, Gem?ldegalerie, Berlin, Gem?ldegalerie Alte Meister in Dresden, New York City, Washington,?D.C., The Louvre, Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, and Kassel.[70] His home, preserved as the Rembrandt House Museum in Amsterdam, displays many examples of his etchings; all major print rooms have the majority of these, although a number exist in only a handful of impressions (copies).

  • The Stoning of Saint Stephen (1625) - Mus?e des Beaux-Arts, Lyon
  • Andromeda Chained to the Rocks (1630) - Mauritshuis, The Hague
  • Jacob de Gheyn III (1632) - Dulwich Picture Gallery, London
  • Philosopher in Meditation (1632) - Louvre Museum, Paris
  • Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp (1632) - Mauritshuis, The Hague
  • Artemisia (1634) - Oil on canvas, 142 x 152?cm, Museo del Prado, Madrid
  • Descent from the Cross (1634) - Oil on canvas, 158 x 117?cm, looted from the Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel), Germany in 1806, currently Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg
  • Belshazzar's Feast (1635) ? National Gallery, London
  • The Prodigal Son in the Tavern (c. 1635) - Oil on canvas, 161 x 131?cm Gem?ldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden
  • Dana? (1636?1643) - Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg
  • The Night Watch, formally The Militia Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq (1642) - Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
  • Christ Healing the Sick (Etching c.?1643, also known as The Hundred Guilders Print), nicknamed for the huge sum paid for it
  • Boaz and Ruth (1643) aka The Old Rabbi Old Man Woburn Abbey, Gemaldegalerie, Berlin
  • The Mill (1645/48) - National Gallery of Art, Washington,?D.C.
  • Old Man with a Gold Chain ("Old Man with a Black Hat and Gorget") (c. 1631) Art Institute of Chicago
  • Susanna and the Elders (1647) - Oil on panel, 76 x 91?cm, Gem?ldegalerie, Berlin
  • Aristotle contemplating a bust of Homer (1653) - Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
  • Bathsheba at Her Bath (1654) - Louvre, Paris
  • Christ Presented to the People (Ecce Homo) (1655) - Drypoint, Birmingham Museum of Art
  • Selfportrait (1658) - Frick Collection, New York
  • The Three Crosses (1660) Etching, fourth state
  • Ahasuerus and Haman at the feast of Esther (1660) - Pushkin Museum, Moscow
  • Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis (1661) - Nationalmuseum, Stockholm (Claudius Civilis led a Dutch revolt against the Romans) (most of the cut up painting is lost, only the central part still exists)
  • Syndics of the Drapers' Guild (Dutch De Staalmeesters, 1662) - Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
  • The Jewish Bride (1665) - Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Self-portraits[link]

Other works[link]

  1. ^ a b c Or possibly 1607 as on 10 June 1634 he himself claimed to be 26 years old. See Is the Rembrandt Year being celebrated one year too soon? One year too late? and (Dutch) J. de Jong, Rembrandts geboortejaar een jaar te vroeg gevierd for sources concerning Rembrandts birth year, especially supporting 1607. However most sources continue to use 1606.
  2. ^ a b Gombrich, p. 420.
  3. ^ Gombrich, p. 427.
  4. ^ Clark, p. 203.
  5. ^ Clark, pp. 203?4.
  6. ^ Clark, p. 205.
  7. ^ This version of his first name, "Rembrant" with a "d," first appeared in his signatures in 1633. Until then, he had signed with a combination of initials or monograms. In late 1632, he began signing solely with his first name, "Rembrant." He added the "d" in the following year and stuck to this spelling for the rest of his life. Although we can only speculate, this change must have had a meaning for Rembrandt, which is generally interpreted as his wanting to be known by his first name like the great figures of the Italian Renaissance: Leonardo, Raphael etc., (who did not sign with their first names, if at all). Rembrandt-signature-file.com
  8. ^ Bull, et al., p. 28.
  9. ^ Slive has a comprehensive biography, p.55 ff.
  10. ^ Slive, pp. 60, 65
  11. ^ Slive, pp. 60?61
  12. ^ Registration of the banns of Rembrandt and Saskia, kept at the Amsterdam City Archives
  13. ^ a b c Bull, et al., p. 28
  14. ^ Clark, 1978, pp. 26?7, 76, 102
  15. ^ Adams, p. 660
  16. ^ a b Slive, p. 71
  17. ^ Slive, p.82
  18. ^ Slive, p. 84
  19. ^ Schwarz, p. 12. The sale was in 1658, but was agreed with two years for him to vacate.
  20. ^ Clark, 1974 p. 105
  21. ^ Clark 1974, pp. 60?61
  22. ^ Bull, et al., page 29.
  23. ^ Clark 1978, p. 34
  24. ^ Slive, p. 83
  25. ^ Burial register of the Westerkerk with record of Rembrandt's burial, kept at the Amsterdam City Archives
  26. ^ Hughes, p. 6
  27. ^ Art of Northern Europe, Institute for the Study of Western Civilization.[dead link]
  28. ^ Useful totals of the figures from various different oeuvre catalogues, often divided into classes along the lines of: "very likely authentic", "possibly authentic" and "unlikely to be authentic" are given at the Online Rembrandt catalogue
  29. ^ Two hundred years ago Bartsch listed?375. More recent catalogues have added three (two in unique impressions) and excluded enough to reach totals as follows: Schwartz, pp. 6, 289; M?nz 1952, p. 279, Boon 1963, pp. 287 Print Council of America ? but Schwarz total quoted does not tally with the book.
  30. ^ It is not possible to give a total, as a new wave of scholarship on Rembrandt drawings is still in progress?? analysis of the Berlin collection for an exhibition in 2006/7 has produced a probable drop from 130 sheets there to about 60. Codart.nl The British Museum is due to publish a new catalogue after a similar exercise.
  31. ^ "Schwarzlist 301 ? Blog entry by the Rembrandt scholar Gary Schwarz". Garyschwartzarthistorian.nl. http://www.garyschwartzarthistorian.nl/schwartzlist/?id=148. Retrieved 2012-02-17.?
  32. ^ White and Buvelot 1999, p. 10.
  33. ^ While the popular interpretation is that these paintings represent a personal and introspective journey, it is possible that they were painted to satisfy a market for self-portraits by prominent artists. Van de Wetering, p. 290.
  34. ^ Durham, p. 60.
  35. ^ Bull, et al., pp. 11?13.
  36. ^ Clough, p. 23
  37. ^ van der Wetering, p. 268.
  38. ^ van de Wetering, pp. 160, 190.
  39. ^ Ackley, p. 14.
  40. ^ a b c van de Wetering, p. 284.
  41. ^ van de Wetering, page 285.
  42. ^ van de Wetering, p. 287.
  43. ^ van de Wetering, p. 286.
  44. ^ van de Wetering, p. 288.
  45. ^ van de Wetering, pp. 163?5.
  46. ^ van de Wetering, p. 289.
  47. ^ Clark 1978, p. 28
  48. ^ van de Wetering, pp. 155?165.
  49. ^ van de Wetering, pp. 157?8, 190.
  50. ^ "In Rembrandt's (late) great portraits we feel face to face with real people, we sense their warmth, their need for sympathy and also their loneliness and suffering. Those keen and steady eyes that we know so well from Rembrandt's self-portraits must have been able to look straight into the human heart." Gombrich, p. 423.
  51. ^ "It (The Jewish Bride) is a picture of grown-up love, a marvelous amalgam of richness, tenderness, and trust... the heads which, in their truth, have a spiritual glow that painters influenced by the classical tradition could never achieve." Clark, p. 206.
  52. ^ Schwartz, 1994, pp. 8?12
  53. ^ White 1969, pp. 5?6
  54. ^ White 1969, p. 6
  55. ^ White 1969, pp. 6, 9?10
  56. ^ White, 1969 pp. 6?7
  57. ^ See Strauss, where the works are divided by subject, following Bartsch.
  58. ^ From October 2007, the main galleries were closed for renovations, planned to be finished in 2010[dated info], but the Rembrandts are being shown in a nearby adjacent part of the building according to the Rijksmuseum website[dead link].
  59. ^ See the pdf Preface on the Project website[dead link]
  60. ^ See "Further Battles for the 'Lisowczyk' (Polish Rider) by Rembrandt" Zdzislaw Zygulski, Jr., Artibus et Historiae, Vol. 21, No. 41 (2000), pp. 197?205. Also New York Times story. There is a book on the subject:Responses to Rembrandt; Who painted the Polish Rider? by Anthony Bailey (New York, 1993)
  61. ^ The Metropolitan Museum of Art: European Paintings[dead link]
  62. ^ "Entertainment | Lost Rembrandt works discovered". BBC News. 23 September 2005. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/arts/4276034.stm. Retrieved 7 October 2009.?
  63. ^ "...Rembrandt was not always the perfectly consistent, logical Dutchman he was originally anticipated to be." Ackley, p. 13.
  64. ^ van de Wetering, p. x.
  65. ^ Chronology of his signatures (pdf) with examples. Source: www.rembrandt-signature-file.com
  66. ^ Slive, p. 60
  67. ^ The New England Journal of Medicine, 16 September 2004
  68. ^ Livingstone, Margaret S.; Conway, Bevil R. (16 September 2004). "Was Rembrandt Stereoblind?" (Correspondence). New England Journal of Medicine 351 (12): 1264?1265. doi:10.1056/NEJM200409163511224 PMID 15371590.
  69. ^ Rembrandt pupils (under Leraar van) in the RKD
  70. ^ Clark 1974, pp. 147?50. See the catalogue in Further reading for the location of all accepted Rembrandts
  71. ^ E.?van de Wetering, 'Rembrandt laughing, c.?1628 ? a painting resurfaces' in Kroniek van het Rembrandthuis, June 2008
  72. ^ White, 200
  • Ackley, Clifford, et al., Rembrandt's Journey, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2004. ISBN 0-87846-677-0
  • Adams, Laurie Schneider (1999). Art Across Time. Volume II. McGraw-Hill College, New York, NY.?
  • Bull, Duncan, et al., Rembrandt-Caravaggio, Rijksmuseum, 2006.
  • Clark, Kenneth, Civilisation, Harper & Row, 1969.
  • Clark, Kenneth, An Introduction to Rembrandt, 1978, London, John Murray/Readers Union, 1978
  • Clough, Shepard B. (1975). European History in a World Perspective. D.C. Heath and Company, Los Lexington, MA. ISBN?0-669-85555-3.?
  • Durham, John I. (2004). Biblical Rembrandt: Human Painter In A Landscape Of Faith. Mercer University Press. ISBN?0-86554-886-2.?
  • Gombrich, E.H., The Story of Art, Phaidon, 1995. ISBN 0-7148-3355-X
  • Hughes, Robert (2006), "The God of Realism", The New York Review of Books (Rea S. Hederman) 53 (6)?
  • The Complete Etchings of Rembrandt Reproduced in Original Size, Gary Schwartz (editor). New York: Dover, 1988. ISBN 0-486-28181-7
  • Slive, Seymour, Dutch Painting, 1600?1800, Yale UP, 1995, ISBN 0-300-07451-4
  • van de Wetering, Ernst, Rembrandt: The Painter at Work, Amsterdam University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-520-22668-2
  • Rembrandt by himself (Christopher White?? Editor, Quentin Buvelot?? Editor) National Gallery Co Ltd [1999]
  • Roberto Manescalchi, Rembrandt: la madre ritrovata, M.C.M.(La storia delle cose), dicembre, 2004.
  • Christopher White, The Late Etchings of Rembrandt, 1969, British Museum/Lund Humphries, London
  • Catalogue raisonn?: Stichting Foundation Rembrandt Research Project:
    • A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings?? Volume I, which deals with works from Rembrandt?s early years in Leiden (1629?1631), 1982
    • A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings?? Volume II: 1631?1634. Bruyn, J., Haak, B. (et al.), Band 2, 1986, ISBN 978-90-247-3339-2
    • A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings?? Volume III, 1635?1642. Bruyn, J., Haak, B., Levie, S.H., van Thiel, P.J.J., van de Wetering, E. (Ed. Hrsg.), Band 3, 1990, ISBN 978-90-247-3781-9
    • A Corpus of Rembrandt Paintings?? Volume IV. Ernst van de Wetering, Karin Groen et al. Springer, Dordrecht, the Netherlands (NL). ISBN 1-4020-3280-3. p.?692. (Self-Portraits)
  • Rembrandt. Images and metaphors, Christian Tumpel (editor), Haus Books London 2006 ISBN 978-1-904950-92-9
  • Van De Wetering, Ernst (2004) (2nd paperback printing). The Painter At Work. University of California Press,Berkley and Los Angeles. University of California Press, London, England. By arrangement with Amsterdam University Press. ISBN O-520-22668-2.
  • "Rembrandt work unseen for 40 years to be sold" The Times, 19 September 2009
  • "Rembrandt for sale" The Guardian, 18 September 2009
  • Works and literature on Rembrandt
  • Rembrandt, The Hundred Guilder Print
  • A biography of the artist Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn from the J. Paul Getty Museum
  • Rembrandt's 'Self-portrait as a young man', at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, UK
  • Rembrandt's Late Religious Portraits at the National Gallery of Art, Washington
  • Etchings by Rembrandt at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
  • Rembrandt van Rijn in the "History of Art"
  • Rembrandt's house in Amsterdam Site has good images of many of his etchings
  • Web Catalogue of Rembrandt's Paintings Over 600 paintings, including former and disputed attributions, divided into categories.
  • artistarchive.com over 300 Rembrandt prints with dimensions and reference numbers, many with images.
  • Boston MFA Good images of almost all of Rembrandt's etchings. ca. 400 images.
  • Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam
  • Rembrandt Research Project
  • Encyclop?dia Britannica article
  • Rembrandt van Rijn ? Life and Art
  • Provenance Helpline A play by Jim Grover on art ownership, seen through the eyes of a Rembrandt double portrait.
  • Biblical art by Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn A Themed collection
  • The Rembrandt Signature Files. Information about Rembrandt's name and signatures.
  • Rembrandt Priv? Documents regarding Rembrandt's life, kept at the Amsterdam City Archives (in Dutch)
  • Save rembrandt from the experts Saverembrandt.org.uk
Persondata
Name van Rijn, Rembrandt Harmenszoon
Alternative names Rembrandt
Short description Painter
Date of birth 15 July 1606
Place of birth Leiden, Netherlands
Date of death 4 October 1669
Place of death Amsterdam, Netherlands

vep:Rembrandt

Source: http://article.wn.com/view/2013/07/15/Google_Doodle_celebrates_Rembrandts_407th_birthday/

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Union says drug bans likely not served this year

The baseball players' association says any suspensions resulting from the sport's latest drug investigation likely won't be served until next year if the discipline is challenged before an arbitrator.

Union head Michael Weiner expects Major League Baseball will notify the union of its plans for penalties in the next month, and the union will maintain any discipline should not be announced until after a grievance hearing and then only if arbitrator Fredric Horowitz upholds a ban.

"We're going to have a discussion with them. That discussion will include whether or not names of suspended players will be announced publicly," Weiner said Tuesday during a meeting with the Baseball Writers' Association of America.

Former MVPs Alex Rodriguez and Ryan Braun are among the more than a dozen players under investigation for ties to Biogenesis, a closed anti-aging clinic in Florida linked with the distribution of performance-enhancing drugs. MLB officials have been interviewing players, who have been represented by the union and their own lawyers.

A provision in baseball's drug agreement says discipline can be announced before a hearing if the penalty results from an allegation that became public other than through MLB or a team. Miami New Times published allegations in January, but the union could argue that a penalty results from evidence baseball has gathered rather than the newspaper account.

After MLB and the union decide how to process grievances, hearings will be scheduled before Horowitz ? but not before September and possibly later. Each player is entitled to a separate hearing, and Weiner said the union wants Horowitz to hear all cases.

"When all the interviews are done, we will meet with the commissioner's office and we'll try to work something out," Weiner said. "Our players that deserve the suspensions, we'll try to cope with their suspensions. Our players that don't deserve suspensions, we will argue that they don't deserve a suspension. And I hope we have success. We may not have success on every single player, but I hope we have a fair amount of success."

Weiner spoke from a wheelchair and said symptoms have increased in the last month from a brain tumor he was diagnosed with last summer. He currently can't move his right side or right arm and must use a wheelchair.

Weiner said the union will appoint a deputy executive director within a week or two.

Most of his talk was dominated by the drug investigation.

While most suspensions have been for positive tests since the joint drug agreement was reached in 2002, players also can be penalized for "just cause," based on other evidence.

"In theory, they could be suspended for five games or 500 games," Weiner said. "We could then choose to challenge or not, but the commissioner's office is not bound by the 50-100-life scale."

If multiple players are disciplined, management and union will have to decide the order of the grievance heearings.

"They've got to prove all those cases. I like Dan Halem, a lot, but he's going to be running around like the proverbial chicken with its head cut off," Weiner said, referring to an MLB senior vice president. "If that's the circumstance, we'll just have to schedule them and get them done as quickly as we reasonably can. And if we have the number that you suggest, it's going to take a while."

Speaking before Weiner in a separate session, baseball Commissioner Bud Selig repeated his call to toughen penalties in the drug agreement for 2014.

"We've heard from a lot of players that increased penalties are called for. We've heard from a lot of other players that don't think increased penalties are called for," Weiner said. "And I imagine we will work it out at or near in early December and then have a negotiation with them over that very subject."

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/07/16/3503108/union-says-drug-bans-likely-not.html

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