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Rembrandt tentoonstelling

Rembrandt: Schilderijen Bijeengebracht ter Gelegenheid van de Inhuldiging van Hare Majesteit Koningin Wilhelmina, Stedelij Museum, Amsterdam, 1898

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The cloth cover of the Rembrandt exhibition folio is stamped with gilt lettering.

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Portrait of Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands sometime after her coronation.

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Plans for the Stedelijk Museum’s exterior and interior. (Credit: Stichting Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam)

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Transfer of Nightwatch from the Rijksmuseum to the Stedelijk Museum for the Rembrandt exhibition, August 30, 1898.

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Moving the Rijksmuseum’s Nightwatch into the Stedelijk Museum through a window for the Rembrandt exhibition. (Credit: Stichting Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam)

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Room 26 with view of Cabinet 25. Drawings were exhibited in Room 26. There is a view of Cabinet 25 through the doorway, and Portrait of an Old Woman Cutting Her Nails, now in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, can be seen on the right.

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Room 26 with views of Room 27 and Cabinet 25. Through the doorway on the right is Room 27, where Portrait of a Lady with an Ostrich-Feather Fan (now at the National Gallery of Art) can be seen on the left.

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Room 28, wall A. Portrait of Nicolaes Ruts, now in The Frick Collection, hangs second from the left.

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Room 28, wall C. Rembrandt and His Wife, Saskia van Uylenburgh at Her Toliet, now in The Royal Collection, Buckingham Palace, hangs third from the left.

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Room 30, wall B. The Visitation, now at the Detroit Institute of Arts, hangs second from the left.

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Room 27, wall A. Rembrandt’s Self-Portrait, now in the Kenwood House Collection, is the fourth painting from the left.

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Exhibition floor plan for rooms 22–30. Portrait of a Gentleman with a Tall Hat and Gloves and Portrait of a Lady with an Ostrich-Feather Fan (both now in the National Gallery of Art collection) hung in room 27 at 110 and 111. (Credit: Stichting Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam)

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Room 27, wall C. Portrait of a Gentleman with a Tall Hat and Gloves and Portrait of a Lady with an Ostrich-Feather Fan (both now in the National Gallery of Art Collection) hang third from the right and on the far right.

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Room 30, wall A. Portrait of Princess Amalia van Solms, now in the collection of the Musée Jacquemart-André, hangs seventh from the left and Man with a Sword, The Leiden Collection, New York, hangs ninth from left.

 

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Cabinet 24, walls A–B. The Polish Rider, now in The Frick Collection, hangs on the far right.

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Cabinet 25, walls B–C. Flora, now in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, hangs on the far left.

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Cabinet 25, walls A–B. Portrait of an Old Woman Cutting Her Nails, now in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, hangs second from left.

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Room 27, wall B. Jacob Receives Joseph’s Bloody Coat, now in The Leiden Collection, New York, is the large central canvas.

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Room 28, wall B. Portrait of a Lady, now in the collection of the Rijksmuseum, hangs second from the right.

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