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Rembrandt: one of the greatest artists ever known
01 February 2002



Cet article se compose de 10 pages.
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Self-portrait, etching 1631

Rembrandt was certainly much inquisitive about human condition, as the earliest surviving self-portrait done around 1628 tends to suggest.

The artist, seen head and shoulders, is completely immersed in self-scrutiny, while turning his head to look at the viewer. His eyebrows slightly raised and his lips about to open, Rembrandt is above all meditating. No artist so young in years ever painted his own likeness in such an ascetic mood, without complacency or costume ornament. The light descends above his head, leaving the face almost hidden in protective shadow. The Rijksmuseum's tiny piece is probably the greatest portrait ever painted by an artist at the start of his career.

Rembrandt repeated the same pose a second time in 1629 but though he produced a masterly and expressive panel he somewhat lost the magic exhaled in his first self-portrait.

Magic was however back again in the superb portrait dated 1629, from the Isabella Gardner Museum in Boston, in which the young artist chose to depict himself in mixed attire combining features derived from 16th-century fashion with Oriental fittings.

Showing himself with a stare of surprise gives a clue, it seems that Rembrandt wanted to explore human condition through his own person and his disguise was probably designed to point at man's vanity.

In 1631, Rembrandt came back more explicitly to the theme of his own image in Oriental garb in another work. He stands wearing a turban, the folds being observed somewhat minutely even if the detail seems invented. The rest of the outfit recalls Rembrandt's costumes for biblical scenes. The presence of a seated poodle, a dog then used for hunting and seen as a courtly prerogative suggests that Rembrandt thus painted himself in the guise of a fancy prince between East and West, as Souren Melikian wrote once in the New York Herald Tribune.

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