A Young Man in a Fur Cap and a Cuirass (probably a Self Portrait)

Image credit: The National Gallery, London

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Notes

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This portrait is one of Carel Fabritius’s final works, made in the last year of his short life. He was apprenticed to Rembrandt between 1641 and 1643 and is generally considered one of his most talented pupils.

Although it is impossible to be sure – no documented likeness of Fabritius exists – this is almost certainly a self portrait. The intensity of the gaze and the posture are reminiscent of a series of earlier self portraits made by Rembrandt and his other pupils. The costume he wears, including a soldier’s breastplate, also fits in with this tradition: Rembrandt, for example, painted himself as a soldier in the 1630s.

The fact that it was a self portrait probably wasn’t considered important at the time. Images of personality types or characters in different professions, known as tronies, were popular and artists would use themselves as models to paint from.

The National Gallery, London

London

Title

A Young Man in a Fur Cap and a Cuirass (probably a Self Portrait)

Date

1654

Medium

Oil on canvas

Measurements

H 70.5 x W 61.5 cm

Accession number

NG4042

Acquisition method

Bought, 1924

Work type

Painting

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The National Gallery, London

Trafalgar Square, London, Greater London WC2N 5DN England

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