
The Baptism of the Eunuch
Rembrandt·1626
Historical Context
Rembrandt painted The Baptism of the Eunuch around 1626, depicting the scene from Acts 8 in which Philip baptizes the Ethiopian eunuch who has been reading the prophecies of Isaiah in his chariot. The subject was relatively uncommon in Dutch painting and shows the young Rembrandt drawing on a wide range of biblical narrative in his early career. The elaborate composition — the eunuch stepping into the water, his attendants and horses in the background — demonstrates the ambition of his Leiden period history paintings, their complex figure arrangements and dramatic tenebrism announcing a painter who intended to compete with the highest traditions of European narrative painting.
Technical Analysis
The small, densely populated composition shows the young Rembrandt's still-developing compositional skills, with the exotic costumes and turbans painted in rich, warm colors influenced by Lastman's narrative style.
Look Closer
- ◆Notice the eunuch stepping into the water — the moment of baptism captured in the act rather than before or after.
- ◆Look at the exotic costumes and turbans painted in rich, warm colors — Rembrandt's early fascination with the material splendor of the wider world.
- ◆Observe the horses and attendants in the background, the chariot the eunuch was riding when he encountered the prophecies of Isaiah.
- ◆Find the compositional ambition of the young Rembrandt already present — the complex staging of multiple figures and animals in a single spatial scene.
.jpg&width=600)
%2C_by_Rembrandt%2C_from_Prado_in_Google_Earth.jpg&width=600)





