Black chalk drawing of a baby in a cap, traditionally thought to be the artist's son, Titus van Rijn, sleeping in a cradle.

Past exhibition

14 May – 6 October 2024

Room 90a

Sign up to our emails and be the first to hear about upcoming exhibitions and events.

Browse past exhibition catalogues, books and gifts, available in the British Museum Shop

This exhibition gave visitors the chance to discover an intimate drawing of a sleeping child, the first work by Rembrandt to be added to the British Museum collection for decades.

The drawing by the renowned 17th-century Dutch artist Rembrandt had been in private collections for over 200 years but was donated to the nation and allocated to the British Museum through the Arts Council's Acceptance in Lieu scheme. 

This added to the Museum's extensive collection of over 1,000 prints and 72 drawings by Rembrandt (1606–69) and more than 300 drawings by his pupils. The collection was largely assembled in the 18th century, and this was the first Rembrandt drawing to enter the British Museum collection in over 35 years. 

The drawing, which dates to about 1645, was displayed alongside drawings of children in Dutch and Flemish art, to showcase the practice of drawing from life and depicting domestic subjects. Rembrandt's studies from life of children are among his most tender and endearing drawings and the display featured six drawings of children from different periods of his career – and his ability to capture movement with only a few well-placed lines remained consistent throughout his practice.  

Children appear in many guises in Dutch and Flemish art: studies for formal portraits, with examples by Anthony van Dyck, tender domestic scenes, best represented by Rembrandt and his pupils, and in playful depictions of daily life, such as Adriaen van Ostade's interiors populated by children, who play, sleep, cry and perform domestic duties. In this context, the drawings of children by Rembrandt and his circle appear seemingly timeless – observed from life, not embellished or idealised, they connect with us, almost 400 years later.

You may also be interested in