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Portrait of a Man (Guillaume Fillastre?)
Historical Context
This portrait of a man, possibly Guillaume Fillastre, in the Courtauld Gallery, demonstrates the penetrating characterization that Rogier brought to his portraits of Burgundian court figures. His depictions of the nobility and functionaries of the court of Philip the Good influenced portrait painting across northern Europe for generations, establishing conventions of psychological directness, three-quarter pose, and precise physiognomic rendering that would define Flemish portraiture for the rest of the century. Rogier van der Weyden combined exquisite emotional intensity with compositional clarity, making him the most influential Flemish painter of the mid-fifteenth century. Portraiture flourished during the Renaissance as humanism elevated the individual, and Rogier's court portraits gave the Burgundian nobility images that combined dynastic pride with psychological insight unusual in earlier northern portraiture.
Technical Analysis
The sitter's angular features are rendered with sharp precision against a dark background. Rogier's characteristic clarity of line and volume creates a three-dimensional presence unusual in early portraiture.






