This print, after a 1639 etching by rembrandt, shows a well-dressed man of middle age seated before a pair of scales and an open ledger. He hands his young assistant a bag as customers stand waiting nearby. The scene is set beneath a large painting of the crucifixion placed on the far wall. A printed legend beneath the image states "scilicet improbae / crescunt divitiae," or "it is unconscionable / this increase in wealth," a phrase condemning miserly behavior. Yet rembrandt's original etching may have been a portrait of jan uytenbogaert, an amsterdam finance minister and the artist's patron. Thus the original image may not have represented a conventional miser or an allegory of gold and greed, but a responsible and civic-minded "good steward" of public funds and the public trust. The scales may allude not only to his profession, but also to a balanced approach towards period civil and religious divides. Date: Circa 1760 – 1790. Collection: Science History Institute. Jan Uytenbogaert - DPLA - c801875d54f034bcfee6074732c8ad85
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