Quantcast
Channel: Art History News
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2851

Dutch Self-Portraits - Selfies of the Golden Age.

$
0
0


The Mauritshuis in The Hague exhibits the best of Dutch paintings from the Golden Age. But how did the artists themselves actually look? From 8 October 2015 through 3 January 2016, the museum is hosting the exhibition Dutch Self-Portraits - Selfies of the Golden Age

Visitors will come face-to-face with legendary painters such as Jan Steen, Rembrandt, Carel Fabritius and Gerrit Dou. An intriguing encounter with the masters of self-portrait from the Golden Age.
Many seventeenth-century Dutch painters have made self-portraits, more than in any other country. Some painters such as Rembrandt for example were true experts, whereas others only left one known self-portrait.

The exhibition offers a brief overview of the genre. Using twenty-seven paintings (mostly on loan), the various types of self-portraits are explained: portraits such as 'upper-middle class gentleman', self-portraits with others (for example family members), self-portraits with a still life, self-portraits in a role (such as hunter) and self-portraits with trade attributes (palette, brushes, easel). This latter category is especially well represented in Dutch art.

Selfies from the Golden Age

In a self-portrait, an artist presents himself; he (or she) shows what he finds important and how to present his profession, status or position in the world. With the inquiring gaze through which the artist looked into the mirror, it seems as if he is looking at us. The artist not only shows how he or she looks, but also what his talent is as a painter.

Thanks to the selfie phenomenon, the concept of self-portrait is currently a popular topic. Selfies are very easy to make, at any location and moment of the day, dozens of times in succession if desired. In the seventeenth century, this of course was unimaginable. The only technique in that time to make anything like a selfie was through drawing or painting. This required a long training period and great technical skills, which is why making self-portraits was still the exclusive domain of artists in that time.

The exhibition Dutch Self-Portraits - Selfies of the Golden Age explains the choices they have made in terms of facial expression, posture, clothing, hairstyle, attributes and background. The differences between then and now are significant. But one thing remained unchanged: the fact that the creators of a self-portrait must choose how they want to present themselves.

Dutch Self-Portraits - Selfies of the Golden Age can be seen from 8 October 2015 through 3 January 2016 in the exhibition room of the Mauritshuis in The Hague.


Along with the exhibition, a richly illustrated catalogue will be published in Dutch and English by Waanders Publishers.




Thomas Willeboirts Bosschaert                  
Self-portrait with palet and brushes, c. 1636/37            
Noordbrabants Museum Den Bosch

Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_001
Fotograaf:
©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag



Adriaen van der Werff (Kralingen 1659-1722 Rotterdam)
Self-Portrait with the Portrait of his Wife and Daughter, 1699
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_002

Fotograaf: ©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag



Jan Steen (Leiden 1626-1679 Leiden)
Self-Portrait Playing the Lute, c.1663/65

Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid 
Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_03
Fotograaf:
©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag


 
Cornelis Bisschop (Dordrecht 1630-1674 Dordrecht)
Self-Portrait as the Greek Painter Parrhasius, 1668
Dordrechts Museum, Dordrecht


Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_004
Fotograaf:
©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag


Gerrit Dou (Leiden 1613-1675 Leiden)
Self-Portrait, c.1665
Collection Eijk and Rose-Marie de Mol van Otterloo
Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_005

Fotograaf: ©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag




Arie de Vois(Utrecht c.1632 – 1680 Leiden)
Self-Portrait as a Hunter, c.1660-1665
Mauritshuis, The Hague
Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_006

Fotograaf: ©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag



Gerard ter Borch (Zwolle 1617-1681 Deventer)
Self-Portrait, c.1668
Mauritshuis, The Hague
Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_007
Fotograaf:
©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag

 
Rembrandt
Self-Portrait, 1669
Mauritshuis, The Hague
Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_008
Fotograaf:
©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag

Huygh Pietersz Voskuyl
Self-Portrait, ca. 1638,
Mauritshuis The Hague
Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_009
Fotograaf:
©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag


Judith Leyster
Self-Portrait, c. 1640
National Gallery of Washington
Mauritshuis_Zelfportretten_010
Fotograaf:
©Ivo Hoekstra
Credits: Mauritshuis, Den Haag


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2851

Trending Articles