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Self-Portrait with Beret and Turned-Up Collar is a 1659 oil on canvas painting by the Dutch artist Rembrandt, one of over 40 self-portraits by Rembrandt.It has been noted as a self-portrayal of subtle and somber qualities, a work in which may be seen "the stresses and strains of a life compounded of creative triumphs and personal and financial reverses".
Self portrait in a flat cap and embroidered dress: About 1642 B120: 1: The Spanish gypsy ‘Preciosa’ About 1642 B148: 1: Student at a table by candlelight: About 1642 B356: 2: Girl with a basket: About 1642 B157: 2: The hog: 1643 B212: 1: The Three Trees: 1643 B220: 1: The shepherd and his family: 1644 B057: 4: The rest on the flight: a ...
Rembrandt's Bathsheba at Her Bath, 1654. In this depiction of Lucretia, she is wearing an ornate gold dress and pearl earrings, indicating her status as a woman of wealth. Her dress is somewhat disarrayed, exposing her under garment. The fabric of her undergarment is stained with blood, signifying her own acceptance of impending death.
Seen in terms of Rembrandt's style alone, about 1639-40 seems more likely. [2] As in many of Rembrandt's actual self-portraits, the subject wears fanciful dress that suggests the 16th rather than the 17th century. The gorget was contemporary wear for a soldier, included in a number of Rembrandt's tronie self-portraits. [3]
In England from the 1630s, under the influence of literature and especially court masques, Anthony van Dyck and his followers created a fashion for having one's portrait painted in exotic, historical or pastoral dress, or in simplified contemporary fashion with various scarves, cloaks, mantles, and jewels added to evoke a classic or romantic mood, and also to prevent the portrait appearing ...
A Polish Nobleman is a 1637 painting by Rembrandt depicting a man in a costume of Polish szlachta (nobility). The identity of the subject of the painting is unclear, and has given rise to several different interpretations. The view that the figure's dress is clearly Polish is not universally held and it may have been a self-portrait.
For example, the Telegraph points out that Melania's emerald green dress chosen to meet the royals of Jordan is important for a few reasons: Green is one of the colors on the Jordanian flag, ...
The Infanta Margarita of Spain is shown here wearing a mourning dress of unrelieved black with long sleeves, cloak and hood. She wears her hair parted to one side and severely bound in braids, 1666. Two English ladies wear dresses with short sleeves over chemise sleeves gathered into three puffs. The long bodice front with curving bands of ...
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