Joseph's Dream (Studio of Rembrandt, 1650-1655) explained

Joseph's Dream is a 1650-1655 oil on canvas painting by Barent Fabritius and other artists in Rembrandt's studio. It is now in the Museum of Fine Arts (Budapest), which purchased it in 1885 from Alois Hauser the Elder's collection in Munich.[1] It had previously been auctioned in Amsterdam in 1755.[2]

It shows Saint Joseph receiving the second of his dreams warning him of the Massacre of the Innocents (Matthew 2: 13-15).[3] A pen sketch for the painting's composition by Rembrandt himself is now in the Kupferstichkabinett Berlin. The Rembrandt catalog raisonné of 1908 accepted the painting as an autograph work, but by the time of the catalog raisonné of 1935 it had been re-identified as a studio work, an identification also accepted by the Rembrandt Research Project.

References

  1. Web site: Catalogue entry. hu.
  2. Klara Garas: Malarstwo w Muzeum Sztuk Pięknych w Budapeszcie. Warszawa: Arkady, 1975.
  3. Rosalind Ormiston: The life and works of Rembrandt. New York: Hermes Hous, 2012. .