In 1625, a nineteen-year-old aspiring artist journeyed from Leiden to Amsterdam where he apprenticed himself to Pieter Lastman, the premier Dutch painter of his time. Lastman was known as a “history painter”—the history being primarily biblical—and the young man, whose name was Rembrandt van Rijn, aspired to follow in Lastman's footsteps.
Immediately following his six-month apprenticeship to Lastman, who surely had no idea that he would one day be entirely eclipsed by his student, Rembrandt created a work known today as Balaam and the Ass. It presents Rembrandt's version of the famous tale that is the centerpiece of this week's Torah reading from the book of Numbers (22:2-25:9).
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