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The Rembrandt House Museum in Amsterdam: A review

You could easily be forgiven if, at first, you just walk by the Rembrandt House Museum in Amsterdam. You might notice that it’s pretty, but so are so many houses along the old canal rings.

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The Rembrandt House Museum is 3 stories high, plus an attic. The windows on the ground floor are tall rectangles while the windows on the upper floors are smaller. the bottom panes of the lower and middle floor windows have open red shutters. The top floor windows and the little attic dormer mindows have shutters that would cover the whole window if closed. The brickwork has an arch over the ground floor windows. the building to the left is, by contrast, dark grey and very minimalistic, with a flat front with a big banner hanging down showing a Rembrandt painting.
The Rembrandt House Museum, with its annex building to the left

On a less-charming street than many of the other small museums in Amsterdam that I’ve written about, this house was where Rembrandt lived and taught a handful of pupils until bankruptcy forced him out. The exterior still shouts “Golden Age” in all its glory. However, inside it was completely changed over the centuries, so, when it became a museum, it was restored to its mid-1600’s appearance. In other words, the inside is all a reconstruction.

Historical reconstruction

This is a good thing and a bad thing. On the positive side, it gives a realistic idea of what a 17th century Amsterdam house looked like when it was new. The furnishings are based on what is visible in many of the paintings and sketches by Rembrandt himself as well as by the students who passed through his studio.

Taken from floor level, the photo shows the bottom of the very large hearth. On the left, a tiled cube that has pots on top of it and a latched door in the side - presumably the oven and stove. Other pots sit on the floor of the hearth.
a view of part of the kitchen in the Rembrandt House Museum

You can see his reception room, where he sold his paintings; the kitchen, including the bedstee where the maid slept; his bedroom; his studio; and his students’ studio. There’s a large storeroom, where he kept specimens of various sorts, as well as a working press for printing etchings.

What Rembrandt House Museum is missing

On the other hand, it’s missing something: atmosphere. When I go to see a historic house, like the Van Loon Museum, for example, I expect to see furnishings that are old. The staircase should be worn, the lighting should be poor, the tiling in the kitchen should be chipped.

Such things are signs of wear, to be sure, but I like them. They help me imagine more vividly what it might have been like to live in the house in that time. I had that feeling climbing the dark stairway to Ons’ Lieve Heer op Solder, for example.

The Rembrandthuis is just too clean, too new, and too well-lit. It was interesting nevertheless, especially the sight of his studio upstairs, reconstructed to match how it looked when he lived there.

You might also be interested in these other sights in Amsterdam:

In the foreground, a simple chair with wooden arms and a leather or cloth seat. Behind, against the wall, a simple wooden table with a triangular stool underneath it. It has a lectern with a picture and a large folio bown book sitting on it. Behind that is a window. To the right, above the chair, are some shelves. A few objects on the shelves: a skull, a small figurine, a candlestick, some books, a triangle and a compass. Inside the Rembrandt House Museum.
a corner of Rembrandt’s studio

The Rembrandt House Museum includes a modern building next door, which allows for more exhibition space. The exhibit when I visited was called “Rembrandt’s Late Pupils: Studying under a Genius.” It was fascinating to see his students’ work and recognize what an influence he had on them when they studied with him in his home. Some of them went on to make names for themselves: Nicolaes Maes, for example.

The current exhibition is called “Black in Rembrandt’s Time” (March 6-May 31) and the next scheduled one is called “Hansken. Rembrandt’s elephant” (June 19-Sept. 27, 2020). These dates may change to make up for the museum’s closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Rembrandt House Museum also has a large collection of Rembrandt’s etchings in their permanent collection.

Recommendation

If you are trying to get a feel for what life in the Golden Age in Amsterdam was like, this isn’t the museum for you.

However, if you are interested in Rembrandt’s work or Golden Age painting in general, visiting the Rembrandt House Museum will give you some insight into his life, and would be especially worth it if you are also planning to visit the Rijksmuseum and/or the Mauritshuis in the Hague to see some of his most well-known works. Plan an hour or two: if you tend to skim, as I do, an hour is enough. If you want to read every explanatory sign in the exhibition, or try out the press and make an etching of your own, you’ll be there longer.

A detail from the shelf in Rembrandt's studio in Rembrandt House Museum: two large white bound books lie on their side, another smaller book on top of them and a candlestick on that. Beyond are three more bound books, standing agains the wall at the end of the shelf.
detail from Rembrandt’s studio

To buy tickets ahead of time to the Rembrandt House Museum, click here.

Or you can take this walking tour, which includes skip-the-line tickets to the Rembrandt house, as well as other sites that were part of his life and work.

Het Rembrandthuis Museum: Jodenbreestraat 4, Amsterdam. Walk in 12 minutes from the central train station or take the metro 51, 53 or 54 in 6 minutes, getting off at Waterlooplein. Open daily 10-18:00. Admission: €14/$16.

If you are going to visit several museums and attractions on your trip to Amsterdam, it might be worth your while to buy the I AMsterdam City Card. It includes admission to a whole list of museums, sights and entertainment in and outside of Amsterdam, plus a canal boat trip and unlimited public transportation.

Pinnable image
Text: Rembrandt House Museum Amsterdam
Image: the exterior of the Rembrandt House Museum

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about Rachel

Hi, I’m Rachel!

Rachel’s Ruminations is a travel blog focused on independent travel with an emphasis on cultural and historical sites/sights. I also occasionally write about life as an expatriate. I hope you enjoy what I post here; feel free to leave comments! Read more…
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I totally disagree with you but this is the beauty of Amsterdam’s small museums. There is something for everyone. To stand in the space where the Jewish bride was painted and see how paints were made. To explore the technique that Rembrandt used to make his etchings I find more educational than the Van Loon House who were slave traders. The history of the street is also fascinating. The modern architecture hides such great stories of community spirit in the 1970s, Spinoza, hidden catholic churches and more. In my opinion well worth a visit.