
Supabase Storage • Public Domain
Rembrandt etched this intimate scene around 1635, depicting itinerant street musicians performing for a peasant family. An old man cranks a hurdy-gurdy while his younger companion plays bagpipes. A small child grins with delight, while a little dog huddles in fear at the unfamiliar sounds.
Early in his career, Rembrandt made numerous prints of beggars, vagabonds, and street performers, showing notable sympathy for society's margins. The etching measures just 14 x 12 cm but contains extraordinary detail. Impressions exist at the Rijksmuseum, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Cleveland Museum of Art.

James Pradier, 1825
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland

, 1880
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland

, -305
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland

, 1150
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland
Other masterpieces from the Baroque movement

El Greco, 1614
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Frans Hals, 1624
Wallace Collection, London

Johannes Vermeer, 1670
Louvre, Paris, Paris

Johannes Vermeer, 1663
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
Johannes Vermeer, 1666
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Johannes Vermeer, 1665
Mauritshuis, The Hague

Johannes Vermeer, 1664
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Diego Velázquez, 1650
National Gallery, London
Luxury wall art with the same mood and energy. Gallery-quality canvas, no museum crowds.
Browse Collection