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



Cet article se compose de 10 pages.
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Rembrandt was certainly a man haunted by his inner thoughts, not of one exulting in triumph. The self-portrait could be a kind of parable on the human condition and such feeling is strengthened by a remarkable self-portrait of 1640 painted ''as an ingenious expression of his ambitions." Such an interpretation is based on the costume in which elements are borrowed from Raphael, Titian and Dürer. But the profound interrogation in the eyes, the unsmiling lips, belie any idea that Rembrandt may have wanted to parade as the Raphael of modern times. This is a man utterly plunged in meditation.

These self-portraits were not images of vanity, nor superficial exercises in expressiveness. In 1652, Rembrandt posed for himself, looking full front, or nearly so. Dressed in a brown quilted coat which could be that of a Middle Eastern muleteer, the painter's concern is clearly not the quality of attire. The feverish stare, the lips pressed hard, betray the intensity of self-probing, the anxiety of a man looking for reassurance regarding unanswered questions. Preserved in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, this is one of Rembrandt's greatest works.

Self-portrait, 1652 (Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna)

Through his final years, the painter's stare seemed to become more piercing, and more troubled. In a self-portrait from Vienna, cropped on all sides but still admirable, the knitted eyebrows, the sagging face convey a feeling close to distress.

In 1658, Rembrandt portrayed himself wearing an intriguing guise. His working apron is fastened with a Middle Eastern-style sash. Seen seated frontally in a chair, in quasi-regal manner, the painter holding a long brush has a forced smile and some inner anger mixed with anxiety can be read in his feverish eyes.


Self-portrait 1658 (The Frick Collection)

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