
Portrait of a Thirty-Two Year Old Man
Jan van Scorel·1521
Historical Context
Jan van Scorel painted this Portrait of a Thirty-Two Year Old Man around 1529, a precisely dated portrait that combined the sitter's exact age with the psychological penetration that characterized van Scorel's mature portraiture. After his Italian journey and return to the Netherlands, Van Scorel developed a portrait approach that combined the Venetian school's psychological depth and warm coloring with the northern tradition's commitment to precise physiognomic observation. The age inscription—giving the sitter's exact years—created a temporal precision that made the portrait simultaneously a document of a specific moment in time and a meditation on mortality, the fixed age creating a permanent record against the ongoing passage of years that would transform or end the depicted face. His direct psychological engagement with the subject is fully evident.
Technical Analysis
The portrait demonstrates van Scorel's emerging synthesis of Netherlandish precision with Italian Renaissance breadth. The inscription of the sitter's age follows the Dutch tradition of documenting such specifics.







