
Rijksmuseum
De derde oosterse kop
- Date
- 1635
- Medium
- paper
- Institution
- Rijksmuseum
This set of etchings is traditionally called the ‘Four Oriental Heads’. Rembrandt did not etch them from life, but rather after prints his Leiden friend and colleague Jan Lievens made around 1631. He did not do this simply because he admired Lievens’s work. On three of the four prints, Rembrandt noted that he had geretuckeerd (meaning both adapted and improved) them.
The authoritative record is held by Rijksmuseum. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Rijksmuseum and other institutions.

De tweede oosterse kop
Rijksmuseum

De vierde oosterse kop
Rijksmuseum

De eerste oosterse kop
Rijksmuseum

The Second Oriental Head
Minneapolis Institute of Art
The Fourth Oriental Head
Art Institute of Chicago

Drie studies van oude-mannenhoofden
Rijksmuseum

The Third Oriental Head
Cleveland Museum of Art

Head of an Oriental
Cleveland Museum of Art

Bald-headed Man in Profile
Rijksmuseum
The First Oriental Head
Art Institute of Chicago

Bald-headed Man in Profile
Rijksmuseum

Drie vrouwenhoofden, één slapend
Rijksmuseum