The portraitist and history painter John Opie was introduced to London in 1781 as 'the Cornish Wonder'. Opie’s style was marked by strong realism, and striking contrasts of light and dark, a style he further developed after a visit to the Netherlands in 1786. In this work the influence of Rembrandt's self-portraits can clearly be seen in his dramatic chiaroscuro and generous use of impasto.
Opie’s self-portrait is displayed here next to Reynold’s Mrs Siddons as the Tragic Muse, a painting Opie is reputed to have described as the finest picture he had ever seen, “superior to any of the Titians.”
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