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Self-Portrait

Anselm Feuerbach1873

Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
Berlin, Germany

Feuerbach’s striking preference for self-portraits in a proudly distant pose — often with a cigarette — is not merely due to personal vanity: it also expresses the artist’s claims to social acceptability on the grounds of the aristocracy of the intellect. Feuerbach painted this self-portrait at the age of forty-four, buoyed up by having completed two major works, the second version of The Symposium and his second Battle of the Amazons. His plain, collarless garment looks like a studio overall, and yet there is nothing bohemian about the appearance of this well-groomed, extremely self-aware, handsome man. Venetian portraits of the late Renaissance have clearly not only influenced the work’s formal simplicity, whose very calm lends authority to the distinct movement of the head, and where the background is only interrupted by the edge of one wall: the fine grey coloration of the work also derives from Venetian precursors.

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  • Title: Self-Portrait
  • Creator: Anselm Feuerbach
  • Date Created: 1873
  • Physical Dimensions: w50.0 x h62.0 cm
  • Type: Painting
  • Technique and material: Oil on canvas
  • Inv.-No.: A I 635
  • ISIL-No.: DE-MUS-815114
  • External link: Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
  • Copyrights: Text: © Prestel Verlag / Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Photo: © b p k - Photo Agency / Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Andres Kilger
  • Collection: Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
  • Artist biography: Anselm Feuerbach was a German painter and a prominent figure of Neoclassicist painting in the German 19th-century school. He started his formal education at the art schools of Düsseldorf and Munich, after which he initially went to Antwerp, serving as an apprentice under Gustave Wappers, and then to Paris, where he was a pupil of Thomas Couture. During this time he was deeply influenced by Gustave Delacroix, Gustave Courbet and other French artists. He also worked in several cities such as Venice, Rome and Vienna, where he studied the works of Michelangelo and Raphael which helped him to develop his individual artistic style. In the beginning, his compositions were of classical design and bore Romantic elements, but he later mainly depicted ancient subjects in soft colours. He is known for such artworks as 'Iphigenia' (1871) and 'The Symposium of Plato' (1873).
  • Artist Place of Death: Venice, Italy
  • Artist Place of Birth: Speyer, Germany
  • Artist Dates: 1829-09-12/1880-01-04
Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

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