REMBRANDT Harmenszoon van Rijn
(b. 1606, Leiden, d. 1669, Amsterdam)

Self-Portrait

c. 1630
Oil on panel, 70 x 57 cm
Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool

Catalogue number: Bredius 12.

Rembrandt began making paintings, drawings and etchings of himself in or about 1628, thereby inaugurating a career as a self-portraitist which is unique in the history of art. Those produced up to about 1631, when he moved to Amsterdam, form a distinct group from the rest. The majority - about fifteen - are etchings. Most are not finished self-portraits in the normal sense but studies in expression. Moreover, by comparison with the self-portraits of other artists and with some of Rembrandt's own later ones, they are unusually direct in approach, sketch-like in handling and small in size. In part, Rembrandt was using them for practice, to discover for himself the range of expressions of which the human face is capable; he needed this information for the portrayal of emotion in his subject pictures. In part, however, he was making use of a picture-type - the head-and-shoulders figure marked by a strong facial expression (the seventeenth-century Dutch term is tronie} - for which there was a lively market in The Netherlands in the 1620s. With most artists these pictures were of genre subjects: small boys, tramps, drinkers, musicians and so on. Where Rembrandt was original was in using his own features for the purpose.

Gradually, however, he discovered that more normal portraits of himself were marketable. The Liverpool Self-Portrait reproduced here dates from towards the end of his Leiden period and is transitional between a study of expression, a tronie, and a conventional head-and-shoulders 'portrait of the artist'.




© Web Gallery of Art, created by Emil Krén and Daniel Marx.