This is my favorite painting:
Return Of The Prodigal Son
 Rembrandt's final word is given in his monumental painting of the Return  of the Prodigal Son. Here he interprets the Christian idea of mercy  with an extraordinary solemnity, as though this were his spiritual  testament to the world. It goes beyond the works of all other Baroque  artists in the evocation of religious mood and human sympathy. The aged  artist's power of realism is not diminished, but increased by  psychological insight and spiritual awareness. Expressive lighting and  colouring and the magic suggestiveness of his technique, together with a  selective simplicity of setting, help us to feel the full impact of the  event.
 The main group of the father and the Prodigal Son stands out in light  against an enormous dark surface. Particularly vivid are the ragged  garment of the son, and the old man's sleeves, which are ochre tinged  with golden olive; the ochre colour combined with an intense scarlet red  in the father's cloak forms an unforgettable colouristic harmony. The  observer is roused to a feeling of some extraordinary event. The son,  ruined and repellent, with his bald head and the appearance of an  outcast, returns to his father's house after long wanderings and many  vicissitudes. He has wasted his heritage in foreign lands and has sunk  to the condition of a swineherd. His old father, dressed in rich  garments, as are the assistant figures, has hurried to meet him before  the door and receives the long-lost son with the utmost fatherly love.
 The occurrence is devoid of any momentary violent emotion, but is raised  to a solemn calm that lends to the figures some of the qualities of  statues and gives the emotions of a lasting character, no longer subject  to the changes of time. Unforgettable is the image of the repentant  sinner leaning against his father's breast and the old father bending  over his son. The father's features tell of a goodness sublime and  august; so do his outstretched hands, not free from the stiffness of old  age. The whole represents a symbol of all homecoming, of the darkness  of human existence illuminated by tenderness, of weary and sinful  mankind taking refuge in the shelter of God's mercy,
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