10 March 2026

Newly authenticated Rembrandt painting!!!

Rijksmuseum researchers recently analysed the Vision of Zacharias in the Temple 1633 and reported it's a Rembrandt van Rijn, painted when he'd moved from Leiden to Amsterdam. The work once rejected as a Rembrandt has now been authenticated, after 2 years of rugged scrutiny.

His vision of Zacharias depicted an account in the Gospel of Luke of the High Priest Zachariah  learning his barren elderly wife Elizabeth would bear a son, the future John the Baptist. Zachariah was captured while performing his Temple duties, reading scripture in front of burning incense, caught unawares. His expression conveyed his surprise as the Archangel Gabriel's news struck him dumb. Zachariah remained mute through the conception and pregnancy, regaining his speech after he agreed their son would be named John. Gabriel was not visible in the painting which only suggested his presence; the angel was unusually represented as radiant light in the upper right corner of the panel. This was an unusual approach at a time when angels were normally depicted as humans with wings. But remember Rembrandt at that time was primarily producing lucrative portraits, not Biblical scenes.

Vision of Zacharias in the Temple 
 by Rembrandt, 1633
Rijksmuseum

In the distant past it was attributed to Rembrandt, and appeared in the first major Dutch exhibition dedicated to him at the Stedelijk Museum in 1898. A 1898 label behind the panel noted the work was exhibited in Sept-Oct as an authentic Rembrandt. But after 1960, specialists decided the work might have been painted by one of Rembrandt’s collaborators such as Jan Lievens, according to Dutch news outlet Het Parool. Without being able to view the work, these claims could not be verified until two years ago.

In 1960, Rembrandt specialists rejected the attribution and the work disappeared. Scholars weren’t permitted to study it until 2 years ago when the owner contacted the museum. The Rijksmuseum unveiled the work and said painstaking analysis and hightech scans had confirmed it was painted by Rembrandt after the young artist moved to Amsterdam. The painting hasn’t been on public display in decades after being bought by a private collector in 1961, a year after it was not called a Rembrandt. Vision of Zacharias was last studied in 1960 when scholars ruled out the possibility that it could be by the Dutch master. Why was the painting excluded from a list of the Dutch master's works in 1960 and why did it disappear after being sold to a private collector in 1961. Although it hasn’t seen publicly since 1961, specialists have recently access to a much wider range of advanced modern analysis techniques.

The work was handed to the museum’s Conservation Dept, which was recently responsible for Operation Night Watch, the museum’s ambitious research & conservation project. As well as traditional stylistic comparisons and signature analysis, the 2-year research project centred around a macro X-ray fluorescence scans. It found traces revealing the composition had been altered, typical of the Dutch Old Master’s painting technique. This deep study of the work, including a scan and comparisons with his other works, confirmed young Rembrandt painted it.

Evidence
The recent 2-year study revealed that all the paints used for the Vision of Zacharias were found in other Rembrandts from the early 1630s. The museum confirmed the authenticity after studying the paints, which fit with those used by Rembrandt during that period. The painting technique and the build-up of paint layers were similar to other early works by Rembrandt, compositional changes that supported the work’s authenticity. The changes made to details while Rembrandt was still painting were analysed; the artist’s signature was applied while the painting was still wet, so it was original. Material analysis, stylistic and thematic similarities, alterations made by Rembrandt, and the overall quality of the painting all support the conclusion that this painting is a genuine work. The very high quality painting had all the hall marks of Rembrandt at the peak of his early career. Rijksmuseum’s director unveiled the painting, on show to the public among their other masterpieces, where it is on long-term loan.
 
Dating analysis of the wooden panel confirmed the wood that was used for the panel on which it was painted was definitely from a tree that was cut down before 1633. The work’s oak panel was dated to c1625-40 by tree-ring dating. A material analysis showed that the paints used were the same as those used in other Rembrandt works from the era. Other factors that support the authentication of this painting include its overall high quality and its thematic parallels with the rest of Rembrandt’s early oeuvre, including Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem 1630 and Daniel and Cyrus Before the Idol Bel 1633 

Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem 
by Rembrandt 1630 
ArtWay

Zacharias' surprised look was emphasised by light marking the arrival of Gabriel. An in-depth study of the work, including macro X-ray fluorescence scans and comparisons with other works by the artist, confirmed Rembrandt painted it, said the museum’s curator of C17th Dutch paintings, Jonathan Bikker. All the pigments in the painting were used by Rembrandt in other paintings. 

Daniel and Cyrus Before the Idol Bel, 
by Rembrandt van Rijn, 1633 
Getty Museum

The work joined c350 known Rembrandt paintings. See March 2026 issue of the Burlington Magazine. Thanks to Rijksmuseum identifies new Rembrandt painting, 2026



26 comments:

  1. Its value is not known, but the world record auction price for a Rembrandt painting was £20m, set in 2009. The painting has all the hallmarks of Rembrandt at the peak of the early part of his career.
    In 2015, a Rembrandt painting was given a price tag of £35m by the UK government after being sold privately.
    Other Rembrandt paintings to be sold in recent years include one for £8.6m in 2019, a self-portrait for £12.6m in 2020, and another once-lost Rembrandt work for £11m in 2023.

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    1. BBC many thanks.
      The value of precious paintings always seemed random to me, so I looked up Rembrandt Experts for their decision making. They examine:
      condition and conservation history;
      scholarly acceptance;
      importance within the oeuvre;
      provenance; and
      professional appraisals.
      So although these elements sound rational enough for everyone to agree, personal preferences must play a role.
      Who owns Vision of Zacharias in the Temple (1633) at the moment and is it going to be sold?

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  2. Bom dia minha querida amiga Helen. Fiz uma matéria, sobre os pinturas de Rembrandt. As pinturas dele são maravilhosas. Tenho um livro, que conta a história dele e tem todas as suas pinturas. Fico feliz em saber, que mais uma pintura dele, foi reconhecida. Grande abraço do seu amigo brasileiro

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    1. Luiz
      I noted you wrote that Rembrandt embraced the freedom of etching, exploring its spontaneity to capture the immediacy of the drawing. And although his fame as a painter is undeniable, it was above all in engraving that his genius revealed a unique, personal and experimental voice.

      Does your Rembrandt book cover all 350 of Rembrandt's paintings and do you think they compare well to Vision of Zacharias in the Temple?

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    2. Bom dia minha querida amiga Helen. Acho que o meu livro, sobre Rembrandt, abrange todas as suas 350 pinturas. Ele tem pinturas maravilhosas. A que eu mais gostaria de ver, se encontra perdida "Tempestade no Mar da Galileia. Grande abraço do seu amigo brasileiro.

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    3. Luiz
      Many thanks. Now I want to carefully read through the 350 paintings to see if the authors excluded paintings that had not been authenticated by the official researchers . Or perhaps the authors mentioned them as awaiting authentication in the future.

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  3. Hello Hels, Experts are to be congratulated for their ever-increasing knowledge and sophistication. I would like to know about the detailed notes from 1960 that rejected the painting as authentic, and how the current panel answered each of those "charges." The fact that the pigments were all used by Rembrandt does not move me much, since the reattribution was to Jan Lievens, another Dutch painter contemporary with Rembrandt and presumably with access to the same pigments, as opposed to attribution to another country or era.

    BBC's comment above about the value of Rembrandt's paintings needs some consideration. Without a lot of research, I do not know which paintings these were or the conditions surrounding their sale or valuation. I have noticed in a random way that old masters sold in recent decades have not been the greatest examples, or possibly in impaired condition. Not that we want only to consider the importance of art by price tags, but I am sure that a fine, important Rembrandt, in good condition, would considerably exceed these figures.
    --Jim

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    1. Parnassus
      I too would like to know about the detailed notes from 1960 that rejected the painting as authentic, and how the current panel answered each of those charges.
      Certainly the technical processes have become more sophisticated in the last 65 years, but the experts then must have been totally confident that Vision of Zacharias in the Temple was unable to be authenticated. Nobody would want to reject a Rembrandt, especially one that I love.

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  4. This is interesting. I can only imagine how difficult it is, especially since some painters had so many studying under them and copying their style. But how exciting to find a new painting by someone so famous and important.

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    1. Erika
      that was true for many famous artists, but even more so for Rembrandt. He had some 50 pupils who studied in his workshop and learned by copying his work.
      And in his very long career, Rembrandt had many assistants who sealed his canvases, painted his backgrounds and sorting his art materials.

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  5. The painting will go on long-term display at the Rijksmuseum starting in March. This discovery not only adds a new Rembrandt painting to the artist's known body of work. It also reignites hope that there may be more undiscovered masterpieces by the Dutch master waiting to be identified, demonstrating the continued importance of rigorous scholarship and analysis in the art world.

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    1. National Today.
      I wonder if that is true? Before the Vision of Zacharias was authenticated rjust now, a long-lost painting by Rembrandt, The Adoration of the Magi 1633, was discovered as recently as 2021.
      A Rembrandt was dismissed as a copy in 1981 and hidden away in the Oxford Museum basement. But Head of a Bearded Man (c1630) was authenticated just before that in 2020.

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  6. Technology is wonderful in telling who painted what, Hels.

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    1. Margaret
      I would have moved into the laboratories for the 2 years, too excited to sleep at home!!
      I normally think of technology experts as boring and probably illiterate.. now I feel we should all give them a thank you kiss.

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  7. It makes me wonder at those who attempt to pass off fraudulent paintings as genuine, but then I wonder at all criminals who think they're going to succeed in their activity.

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    1. jabblog
      I had a very similar idea, but possibly from the other direction. I hope I am totally wrong.

      When the Rembrandt's authenticity was uncertain, and could have credibly been called in either direction, did the researchers have any reason to fall on the side of authentic? Probably... if the painting is a real Rembrandt, it could be sold for $20 million. If the painting is possibly not a 100% Rembrandt, it might be worth only $15,000. Did the researchers EVER take a fee for indentifying the painting as a Rembrandt.

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  8. It’s remarkable how modern technology and meticulous research have restored Vision of Zacharias to Rembrandt’s oeuvre, shedding light on his early Amsterdam period and his innovative approach to Biblical storytelling.

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    1. roentare
      his 1930s Amsterdam period, while still a very young man, was already a wonderful and successful artist. The irony was that Rembrandt died an impoverished and little known artist, buried in an unmarked grave.
      Thank goodness, as you say, meticulous research is continuing to restore important works to the artist's folio. Otherwise they might have faded from important art history.

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  9. I do like Rembrandt's works, his colours are so rich you can think you might feel the velvet or silk if you touch the paintings. my favourite is the ship on the stormy sea.

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  10. River
    Yes indeed! Dark browns and blacks that were rich, yellows that were earthy, sienna that was burnt.

    Interesting that Luiz also selected the ship on the stormy sea.

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    1. I googled for images of it and printed a small one to put on my wall.

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    2. River
      great idea. Quality prints can give you the same pleasure as the original Rembrandt without waiting to win Tattslotto.

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  11. Art isn't something I know much or anything about still found the post interesting

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    1. Jo-Anne
      Blogging is amazing, I agree. I know a great deal about history in Europe, British Empire and the Mediterranean, so I am delighted to read histories of other continents in blogs.

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  12. Researchers at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam have revealed a rediscovered painting by Rembrandt which was brought in from a member of the public for further investigations. "Vision of Zacharias in the Temple" had been included in an exhibition as Rembrandt in full back in 1898, but by 1960 had been demoted in publications. Read the technical analysis which was undertaken to help prove this painting to be an early work by the master. The painting is on public display in the museum.

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    1. Art History News
      Many thanks for the link to your blog. I am particularly interested in the category called Discoveries.

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