| Job Type |
CDM-ISO-FIX for painting |
| Consultant |
Sight |
| Dimensions |
3630 x 4370 mm |
| Installation |
2003 |
| Location |
Amsterdam |
TOP CULTURAL HERITAGE DESERVES TOP PROTECTION
Probably Rembrandt's most
famous and most
controversial painting was
given its erroneous title the
Night Watch in the early 19th
century. The title referred to
the subdued lighting and led
art critics to seek all manner
of hidden mysteries in the
painting. The original title,
recorded in the still extant
family chronicle of Captain Banning Cocq, together with
a sketch of the painting, sounds rather dry by
comparison: "Sketch of the painting from the Great Hall of Cleveniers Doelen, in which the young Heervan Purmerlandt[Banning Cocq],
as captain, orders his lieutenant, the Heervan Vlaerderdingen [Willem van
Ruytenburch], to march the
company out." It is, therefore, a "Doelen"
piece or group portrait in which the captain can be
seen in the foreground
wearing black and the
lieutenant wearing yellow.
What sets Rembrandt's group
portrait apart from other
comparable paintings is his
use of chiaroscuro as a
dramaticdevice.
Interpretations seeking a
plausible action fail to take
into account that the scenery
is made up more or less of
individual "types". The
painting includes the entire
repertoire of portrait poses and gestures from
Rembrandt's store of figures. There is inevitably a sense of
celebration in the portrayal of
individuals in a Dutch group
painting. Yet whereas Frans Hals, for example, draws
together his individual
participants around a banquet scene, Rembrandt
breaks up the group, so that
individual characters and participants become absorbed in their own actions, each
standing alone.
Due to construction work in the vicinity of the Dutch Rijksmuseum, there
was real need to protect the famous paintings from vibrations.CDM, together
with its Dutch Partner DELTA-L, designed a solution basedon the CDM-ISO-FIX system,
that isolated paintings from these vibrations, therefore protecting them from damage.
|