In 1769 the painting was called the
Bride’s Father Writing Down the Dowry. Later, when the painting was in the
Stanisław August collection, it was referred to as the
Father of the Jewish Bride or other such variations. These titles suggest a thematic connection between
The Scholar at the Lectern and
The Girl in a Picture Frame. They also assume that the paintings were companion pieces, possibly because they were executed in the same year, are of the same size and use the same type of support. They were not in fact painted as a pair. Pairs of portraits painted by Rembrandt were always composed according to the following rule: the male portrait on the left, the female on the right, therefore contrary to the
Royal Castle paintings. ==See also==