Self-Portrait (Rembrandt, Altman)

Self-Portrait, 1660
Artist Rembrandt
Year 1660
Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions 80.3 cm × 67.3 cm (31 58 in × 26 12 in)
Location Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

Self-Portrait is a 1660 oil on canvas painting of himself by the Dutch artist Rembrandt. Painted when the artist was fifty-four, it has been noted as a work in which may be seen "the wrinkled brow and the worried expression the troubled condition of his mind".[1] Part of the Benjamin Altman Collection, it has been in the Metropolitan Museum of Art since 1913.

Description

The Altman portrait is dated 1660, when he was fifty-four years old. This was a year of anxiety for him. He had just been declared bankrupt. He saw his collection of art treasures disposed of at auction and himself deserted by his pupils and his friends, with no studio of his own in which to set up his easel. In this portrait we have a work of mature years, when he brought all the skill and resources of a lifetime to its creation.[1] The lift of the eyebrows that wrinkle his forehead is that of whimsical impatience, yet the spark in his eyes denies defeat. The mouth is drawn and the mark of undeserved neglect is evident in the premature wrinkles, but a certain merry pride lurks in the tilted cap and raised head. A pang of pity shoots through us, only to be replaced by one of keen satisfaction that he, the neglected, is remembered and they, the aristocrats, are forgotten.[2] Though this great artist lived several years longer, they were years of misery, and he painted only one more great work, "The Syndics of the Cloth Hall," now in the Ryks Museum in Amsterdam. His great reputation suffered an almost total eclipse, although to-day he is probably the most popular painter that ever lived. Yet he never lost his courage, and as we see him in this portrait he carries his head bravely and wears his hat jauntily, as if in defiance of the evils that engulfed him. Heretofore we may have felt acquainted with Rembrandt the painter, but now we know Rembrandt the man; for just so he must have looked to his neighbors in the troublous year 1660.[1]

Composition

Technically this portrait shows Rembrandt at his best. The hat, a rich black, and the background, a warm green, are smoothly painted. The shadows in the face are thin, warm, and transparent, while the lighter parts, as on the cheek, are laid on with a well-loaded brush, suggesting the texture of the flesh and made to glow with color. Over a red waistcoat Rembrandt wears a heavy, brownish coat.[1]

Provenance

Those who happen to be familiar with the self-portrait of a year or so earlier, belonging to Henry C. Frick, will find a comparison of the moods of that picture and our work an interesting one. In the portrait owned by Mr. Frick, though it was also painted in a troubled time, he paints himself as though he were a philosopher or prophet to whom all things but his own thoughts are indifferent. In the Altman picture he is prematurely aged by his troubles and is pestered with worries, "the little cares and anxieties of daily life." His forehead is wrinkled and the mouth is drawn, but the cap is tilted a little jauntily on one side and the head is erect and proud.[3]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Van Laer, A.T. (1916). "PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST". Century illustrated monthly magazine. 93: 18. Retrieved 2011-05-15.
  2. Bryant, Lorinda Munson (1915). "VIII". What pictures to see in America. John Lane. p. 122. Retrieved 2011-05-15.
  3. Metropolitan Museum of Art (The Gilliss press). Handbook of the Benjamin Altman collection. p. 26. Retrieved 2011-05-15. Check date values in: |date=, |year= / |date= mismatch (help)

 This article incorporates text from Century illustrated monthly magazine, by A.T. Van Lear, a publication from 1916 now in the public domain in the United States.
 This article incorporates text from What pictures to see in America, by Lorinda Munson Bryant, a publication from 1915 now in the public domain in the United States.
 This article incorporates text from Handbook of the Benjamin Altman collection, by Metropolitan Museum of Art (The Gilliss press), a publication from 1914 now in the public domain in the United States.

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