Culture

Culture

Rembrandt's master class: look, draw and think like the master

Rembrandt's Masterclass at the Rembrandt House is an interactive exhibition that breaks down Rembrandt's craftsmanship into five concrete "lessons." Not only will you look at works by Rembrandt, you will draw, test and practice for yourself.

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This is an exhibition for people who normally go through museums too quickly (even if they don't think so of themselves). For the set-up is not: lots of rooms, lots of text, done. You are put step by step into a working mode: look, try, look again. And that works precisely because it happens in Rembrandt's own home - the place where he and his students spent years on end creating, improving and starting over again.

The exhibition is made up of five master classes: Looking, Technique, Feeling, Experimentation and Sell. The latter is the surprise: it's not just about "making art," but also about how Rembrandt cleverly made himself visible (his self-portraits are a kind of 17th-century marketing machine in this). That's exactly the kind of insight you normally only get from a biography, but here it's just in the route.

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You'll see original works (etchings, paintings and a drawing), but the exhibition leans on assignments: copying an elephant, recognizing a real Rembrandt, practicing posing for a self-portrait and little tests that let you notice how quickly your brain "fills in" what you think you see. The elephant assignment is extra fun because it harkens back to Hansken, the elephant that Rembrandt was once able to study in real life.

You don't walk from showcase to showcase here, you train your gaze and your nerve.

The finale is cleverly chosen: you end up in a slow-watching room with The anatomy lesson of Jan Deijman (1656).. There it suddenly gets quiet in your head. You see how everything falls together: composition, light, emotion and that typical Rembrandt daring to make it not "beautiful" but touching. With audio and explanations, you are literally guided through the looking, so you don't think "okay, seen it" after only twenty seconds.

Practically (and this is one of those details that makes all the difference): don't plan this as "just in between". If you actually do the assignments, you'll be at 60-90 minutes rather than 30. Preferably go at a quieter time, because the slow-watching space only works if you also allow yourself the time. The exhibition runs from Jan. 30 to May 25, 2026.

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Rembrandt House
Jodenbreestraat, Amsterdam
-. January 30 to May 25
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Rembrandt House
Jodenbreestraat, Amsterdam
January 30 to May 25
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