SegPlay® PC Pattern Set Contents
We wanted to share with you a sampling of what our growing collection of paint by number pattern sets contain. Each of the generated SegPlay® PC patterns have been created by our proprietary Segmation? imaging process which generates accurate, non-overlapping pattern line art along with a customized color palette. When these patterns are completely colored, the resulting image has a very strong resemblance to the original artwork.
Our SegPlay® PC collection is growing month by month. Each set comes with approximately 20 carefully designed patterns from a given artist or theme. These vibrant and colorful pieces of art are truly engaging and exciting for you to paint, and especially a joy to look at when completed. You'll need an authorized version of SegPlay® PC to install them (you can buy SegPlay®PC at our Kagi store).
A complete list of our growing set of SegPlay® PC computerized paint by number patterns can be found here.
If you have some suggestions about future content for SegPlay® PC (artist, theme, style, etc.) please send us an email at suggest@segmation.com
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Rembrandt van Rijn |
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Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (1606-1669) is definitely one of the greatest painters in European history. His contributions in portraying human emotions and natural movement in his paintings occured during the Dutch Golden Age of the 17th century. Our collection includes most all of his most reknown works including several self portraits, "Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp", "The Jewish Bride", "The Night Watch", "Portrait of a Lady with an Ostrich-Feather Fan" and "Syndics of the Drapers' Guild". Become a Dutch Master as you paint these yourself with SegplayPC™! |
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| The Night Watch | Self Portrait | Scene of the Prodigal Son in the Tavern | |||||
| The Anatomy Lecture of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp | Artemis | Supper at Emmaus | |||||
| Jan Six | Portrait of a Lady with an Ostrich Feather Fan | The Syndics of the Clothmakers' Guild | |||||
| Self Portrait | The Return of the Prodigal Son | Saskia at Her Toilet | |||||
| Self Portrait as the Apostle Paul | Self Portrait | Christ in the Storm on the Lake of Galilee | |||||
| Philosopher in Meditation | Jewish Bride | Hendrickje Bathing in a River | |||||
| This set is available at our Kagi Store and requires an authorized version of SegPlay® PC to be already installed on your machine. | |||||||
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Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (July 15, 1606 - October 4, 1669) is regarded as the greatest artist of Holland’s Golden Age and one of the most important in European art. A prolific painter, draftsman and etcher, his portraits and artistic interpretations of the Bible remain unique. By the end of his life, Rembrandt had produced over 600 paintings (including nearly 100 self-portraits), around 400 etchings, and 2,000 drawings. Rembrandt was born in Leiden, the Netherlands, the fifth son of a miller. Despite coming from a relatively modest family, his parents attached great importance to education, and Rembrandt began his studies at the Latin School. At the age of 14, he was enrolled at the University of Leiden. But the program did not interest him, and he soon left to study art first, a three-year apprenticeship with a local master, Jacob van Swanenburgh, and then, in Amsterdam, with Pieter Lastman, a local master known for his historical paintings. Under Lastman’s tuition, Rembrandt became exposed to works of Caravaggio and the Italian masters. His interest in religious and mythological subjects was most likely a result of Lastman’s influence. After six months, and having mastered everything he had been taught, Rembrandt returned to Leiden, where he was soon so highly regarded that, although barely 22 years old, he took his first pupils. In 1631 Rembrandt moved to Amsterdam and settled there permanently. He became a leading portrait painter and received many commissions for portraits as well as for paintings of religious subjects. His works were characterized by his mastery of chiaroscuro - the theatrical use of light and shadow. He used luxuriant brushwork and rich colors, generous flesh tones, and a lively presentation of subjects that lacked the formality favored by his contemporaries. Of all the Baroque masters, it was Rembrandt who evolved the most revolutionary technique. By the mid 1630s he had abandoned the conventional Dutch smoothness and his surfaces were thick with paint. From the Venetians he learned to use a brown ground but despite a palette that was limited even by 17th century standards, he was renowned as a colorist, combining tones of light and shade with vibrant colors. In 1634 Rembrandt married Saskia van Uylenburg, the beautiful cousin of a successful art dealer and the model for many of his paintings. He was, by then, a wealthy, respected citizen, and in 1639 he purchased a large house (now the Rembrandt House Museum) in the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam. This was the period in which he painted masterpieces such as "The Blinding of Samson", and his most celebrated painting "The Night Watch", a group portrait of one of the city’s militia companies. His studio was filled with pupils. Rembrandt’s family life however was not so successful. Saskia died in 1642, a year after the birth of their son, Titus. His affections then turned to his housekeeper, Hendrickje Stoffels, who modeled for him and bore him a daughter. And despite his financial success, Rembrandt lived expensively, and was declared bankrupt in 1656. He was forced to sell most of his paintings as well as his house and printing press. Eventually, he opened an art shop with Hendrickje and Titus. Rembrandt’s new poverty had little effect on the quality of his work however, even if they did become more somber. Some of the great paintings from this period are "The Jewish Bride", "Bathsheba", and "Jacob Blessing the Sons of Joseph". Rembrandt outlived both Hendrickje and his son, and was buried in an unmarked grave in the vicinity of Amsterdam, in 1669. |
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