A pair of Rembrandt portraits owned privately for more than 130 years went on public display in Paris on Thursday, bought under shared ownership by the French capital’s Louvre museum and the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.
The portraits date back to 1634 and depict Amsterdam trader Marten Soolmans and his wife Oopjen Coppit. They were painted by the Dutch master for the couple’s wedding and are considered a defining example of his work.
Bought by Baron Gustave de Rothschild in 1877 and kept in France ever since, the pair of paintings, for which the museums paid 160 million euros ($174 million), will spend five and then eight years by turns in each museum, always staying together.
French President Francois Hollande (center), Netherlands’ King Willem-Alexander (left) and Queen Maxima pose next to two of Rembrand’s paintings, the portrait of Marten Soolmans (left), and the portrait of Oopjen Coppit. (AP-Yonhap)
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