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Self-portrait with breastplate by Rembrandt

Self-portrait with breastplate

Rembrandt·1629

Historical Context

Rembrandt painted this Self-Portrait with Breastplate around 1629, one of his earliest surviving self-examinations showing him in antique military costume that transformed his young features into a historical or allegorical persona. The combination of studio observation — looking into a mirror — with theatrical self-presentation through historical costume was characteristic of his early self-portraits, which served simultaneously as technical exercises, commercial tronies, and experiments in self-fashioning. The breastplate's metallic surfaces, catching and reflecting the side light, provided a technical challenge that appealed to Rembrandt's mastery of rendering reflective surfaces throughout his career.

Technical Analysis

The gleaming steel breastplate and chain mail are rendered with precise attention to metallic reflections, demonstrating the young artist's virtuosity in depicting contrasting surface textures.

Look Closer

  • ◆Notice the gleaming steel breastplate and chain mail — the metallic surfaces providing maximum technical challenge for the rendering of reflective light.
  • ◆Look at how the armor's curved surfaces capture and distort the studio light — a technical problem Rembrandt explores with characteristic systematic attention.
  • ◆Observe how historical military dress transforms the young painter's familiar features into something more heroic and distanced.
  • ◆Find the experimental confidence of the young Rembrandt: the self-portrait as a vehicle for both self-fashioning and technical practice.

See It In Person

Germanisches Nationalmuseum

Nuremberg, Germany

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil paint
Dimensions
38.2 × 31 cm
Era
Baroque
Style
Dutch Golden Age
Genre
Portrait
Location
Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg
View on museum website →

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