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Lost Rembrandt portraits fetch more than £11 mn at auction | Philstar.com
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Arts and Culture

Lost Rembrandt portraits fetch more than £11 mn at auction

Agence France-Presse - Agence France-Presse
Lost Rembrandt portraits fetch more than £11 mn at auction
Gallery assistants hold two portraits, "Portrait of Jan Willemsz. Can Dee Pluym and Jaapgen Carels" by Dutch artist Rembrandt at Christie's auction house during a press preview in London, on June 30, 2023.
AFP / Daniel Leal

LONDON, United Kingdom — The last known pair of Rembrandt portraits in private hands sold for more than £11 million (nearly P800 million) at Christie's in London on Thursday — nearly 200 years after they first went under the hammer at the auction house.

The paintings, which are thought to date from 1635, had been expected to fetch between £5 million and £8 million (P356 million and P570 million) as part of Christie's "Old Masters" sale.

But the hammer came down at £11,235,000 (P800 million), the auction house said in a statement.

The eight-inch oval portraits depict an elderly plumber named Jan Willemsz van der Pluym and his wife Jaapgen Carels.

The couple, painted in an unusually intimate style for Rembrandt, were friends of the artist's family and hailed from his hometown of Leiden in the Netherlands.

Related: Rembrandt self-portrait 'home after 400 years'

Henry Pettifer, international deputy chairman of Old Master Paintings at Christie's, said last month that he was "stopped in his tracks" when he first saw the portraits.

"I was really staggered to discover that the pictures had never really been researched and never been addressed in any of the literature on Rembrandt over the course of 200 years."

An ancestor of the current owners bought the paintings at auction at Christie's in 1824, where they were listed as Rembrandts, and they have remained in the same collection ever since.

"They've been sitting quietly and enjoyed by the owner's family over the course of two centuries... rather casually enjoying them very much," said Pettifer.

After spotting them, "forensic" work began on verifying that they were genuine Rembrandts, including scientific analysis by art experts from Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum.

The paintings are the smallest known portraits by the 17th century Dutch master, who was better known for much larger works commissioned by wealthy families.

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