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Cyber Monday Extended! EXTRA 25% off Sitewide + Free Shipping - Use code: Cyber25
Cyber Monday Extended! Extra 25% off - Use Code: Cyber25
Rembrandt van Rijn
The year was 1633. Rembrandt, newly celebrated in Amsterdam, envisioned a bold composition - a biblical scene of raw human emotion. He captures the disciples’ fear as their boat is battered by waves, while Christ awakens to calm the violent sea. Their fright is palpable under Rembrandt’s tempestuous brush as men cry desperately for mercy in their final hour.
Rembrandt broke from tradition by painting his first and only seascape. Measuring five by four feet, "The Storm on the Sea of Galilee" (also known as "Christ in the Storm on the Sea of Galilee") reveals the artist maturing into his signature drama and mastery of emotion. The scene remains timeless for admiring generations until a notorious 1990 theft robbed the world. Vanished from the Gardner Museum, this missing masterpiece leaves a hole that cannot be filled. We can now only imagine the disciples’ terror and awe as Christ stills the storm and proves man is not powerless over the forces of nature. Wherever the lost painting resides, a lasting legacy remains through Rembrandt’s profound vision of human resolve.
Below are images of our actual hand-painted oil reproductions on canvas.
Visit our Samples of Reproductions to view more!