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Portrait of a young woman in profile by Rembrandt

Portrait of a young woman in profile

Rembrandt·1632

Historical Context

Rembrandt returned repeatedly to the profile portrait format across his career, and this depiction of a young woman belongs to a group of works from the 1630s when his Amsterdam practice was at its most commercially vibrant. The profile view, unusual for Rembrandt who preferred three-quarter angles that allowed psychological probing, situates this work within a classicizing tradition he was consciously testing against his own naturalist instincts. The subject's identity remains unknown, but her dress and pearl earring suggest she was drawn from Rembrandt's circle of prosperous Amsterdam patrons during his years on the Nieuwe Doelenstraat. The painting belongs to the same period as his commissioned portraits of Marten Soolmans and Oopjen Coppit, when he was commanding the highest portrait fees in the city.

Technical Analysis

Rembrandt applies paint in distinct layers, building up the collar with thick, almost sculptural impasto while keeping the background thin and warm-toned. Light falls from the upper left, catching the jaw and brow in a sharp highlight that contrasts with deep shadow pooling behind the neck. The brushwork on the hair is loose and gestural against the tighter rendering of the face.

Look Closer

  • ◆The profile format shows the woman's specific facial structure — the bridge of the nose, the curve of the jaw, the set of the ear — features that a three-quarter view would partially obscure.
  • ◆Rembrandt's characteristically warm golden lighting picks out the curve of her cheek and the fall of her collar against a dark background.
  • ◆A lace or embroidered collar is rendered with the abbreviated touch of Rembrandt's 1630s style — suggested rather than meticulously described.
  • ◆The dark background has warm brown undertones — not pure black — that give the portrait a glowing rather than stark quality.
  • ◆The profile view creates an unusual relationship with the viewer: she cannot see us, we can examine her — a voyeuristic and formal asymmetry typical of this rare format in his work.

See It In Person

Nationalmuseum

Stockholm, Sweden

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
72 × 55 cm
Era
Baroque
Genre
Portrait
Location
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm
View on museum website →

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