

Rembrandt's paintings are remarkable for their accuracy and lifelike quality. By producing as many tronies as he did with himself as the subject, Rembrandt was not only practicing his art more inexpensively and refining his ability to convey different expressions, but he was able to satisfy consumers while also promoting himself as an artist. Self-portraits of well-known artists were also popular with consumers of the time, who included not just nobility, the church, and the wealthy, but people from all different classes. Rembrandt often used himself as the subject for these studies, which also served the artist as prototypes of facial types and expressions for figures in history paintings. While Rembrandt's self-portraits reveal much about the artist, his development, and his persona, they were also painted to fulfill the high market demand during the Dutch Golden Age for tronies - studies of the head, or head and shoulders, of a model showing an exaggerated facial expression or emotion, or dressed in exotic costumes. The 1650s and 1660s show Rembrandt unabashedly delving into the realities of aging, using thick impasto paint in a looser, rougher manner.

The middle years of the 1630s and1640s show Rembrandt feeling confident and successful, dressed up in some portraits, and posed similarly to some of the classical painters, like Titian and Raphael, whom he greatly admired. Rembrandt used the light and shadow effect of chiaroscuro but used paint more sparingly than during his later years. The early paintings, those done in the 1620s, are done in a very lifelike manner. The portraits can be divided into three stages - young, middle-age, and older age - progressing from a questioning uncertain young man focused on his outward appearance and description, through a confident, successful, and even ostentatious painter of middle-age, to the more insightful, contemplative, and penetrating portraits of older age. He produced more etchings until the 1630s, and then more paintings after that time, including the year he died, although he continued both forms of art all his life, continuing to experiment with technique throughout his career. These self-portraits, produced fairly consistently throughout his life, when looked at together as an oeuvre, create a fascinating visual diary of the artist over his lifetime. However, it wasn't until scholars started studying Rembrandt's work hundreds of years later that they realized the extent of his self-portraiture work. Not only did he paint self-portraits in steady succession during his life, but in doing so he helped advance his career and shape his public image.Īlthough self-portraiture became common during the 17th century, with most artists doing a few self-portraits during their careers, none did as many as Rembrandt. Because there are so many that can be viewed together and compared with each other, viewers have a unique insight into the life, character, and psychological development of the man and the artist, a perspective of which the artist was profoundly aware and that he intentionally gave the viewer, as though a more thoughtful and studied precursor to the modern selfie. The self-portraits chronicle Rembrandt's visage beginning in his early 20s until his death at the age of 63. Recent scholarship has shown that some of the paintings previously thought to have been painted by Rembrandt were actually painted by one of his students as part of his training, but it is thought that Rembrandt, himself, painted between 40 and 50 self-portraits, seven drawings, and 32 etchings.

These self-portraits included 80 to 90 paintings, drawings, and etchings done over approximately 30 years beginning in the 1620s until the year he died. His personal life was also difficult, losing his first wife and three out of four children early on, and then his remaining beloved son, Titus, when Titus was 27 years old. Rembrandt continued to create art throughout his hardships, though, and, in addition to many biblical paintings, history paintings, commissioned portraits, and some landscapes, he produced an extraordinary number of self-portraits. Rembrandt van Rijn (1606 to 1669) was a Dutch baroque painter, draughtsman, and printmaker who was not only one of the greatest artists of all time, but created the most self-portraits of any other known artist. He had great success as an artist, teacher, and art dealer during the Dutch Golden Age, but living beyond his means and investments in art caused him to have to declare bankruptcy in 1656.
