Self-portrait by Judith Leyster | |
---|---|
Artist | Judith Leyster |
Year | c. 1630 |
Medium | oil paint, canvas |
Dimensions | 74.6 cm (29.4 in) × 65.1 cm (25.6 in) |
Location | National Gallery of Art |
Identifiers | RKDimages ID: 166670 |
Self-portrait by Judith Leyster is a Dutch Golden Age painting in oils now in the collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC. It was offered in 1633 as a masterpiece to the Haarlem Guild of St. Luke.[1] It was attributed for centuries to Frans Hals and was only properly attributed to Judith Leyster upon acquisition by the museum in 1949.[2] The style is indeed comparable to that of Hals, Haarlem's most famous portraitist.[3]
In 2016 a second self-portrait was found, dating from around 1653.[4]
Though Leyster looks very relaxed, the composition is to some extent an artificial confection. She is dressed in what must have been her best clothes, which in reality she is unlikely to have risked near wet oil paint. The figure she is painting is borrowed from a different work and was perhaps never actually painted as a single figure.
Critics have found a sense of "Baroque closeness" in this painting.[3] The artist and the viewer are very close in space. Many of the elements in the painting are foreshortened in order to feel closer and like they are coming into the viewer's space.[3]
:3
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).