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File:Frans Pourbus I - Portrait of a man, possibly a self-portrait.jpg

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Summary

Frans Pourbus the Elder: English: Probable self-portraitFrançais : Autoportrait présumé   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Artist
Frans Pourbus the Elder  (1545–1581)  wikidata:Q1445472
 
Frans Pourbus the Elder
Alternative names
Frans Pourbus (I)
Description Southern Netherlandish painter and drawer
son of Pieter Pourbus
father of Frans Pourbus (II)
Date of birth/death 1545 Edit this at Wikidata 19 September 1581
Location of birth/death Bruges Antwerp
Work location
Antwerp (1562-1566), Ghent (1566), Antwerp (between circa 1567 and circa 1581
date QS:P,+1550-00-00T00:00:00Z/7,P1319,+1567-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1326,+1581-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902
)
Authority file
artist QS:P170,Q1445472
Title
English: Probable self-portrait
Français : Autoportrait présumé
Object type painting
object_type QS:P31,Q3305213
Description
description
English: "The present painting is probably the artist’s self-portrait at the beginning of his career. It is a work of youth, in which we can feel, despite some blunders, the artist’s pride for his art and the promise of a successful career. On the removal of the old varnish, the signature and the date have been discovered, albeit today hardly visible to the naked eye. The name can be deciphered but the last number of the date poses a certain problem. We believe that we can make out a zero, which places our portrait in 1570, that is, shortly after the artist’s entry to the guild.

There is another version on panel of the present painting in the Royal Museums of Fine Arts in Brussels, currently under restoration. The technique of both works is very similar, of equal quality but presenting certain variations of treatment in some areas.For a long time, the painting has been attributed to Cornelis van Harlem on the basis of the sitter’s resemblance to the portrait engraved by Hendrik Hondius (1573 – 1640) in his Theatrum Honoris. Both sitters are indeed young, coiffed and dressed in the same way, but this is insufficient for a confident identification of Cornelis van Haarlem. Besides, this attribution to the Dutch artist had been rejected on several occasions.Incidentally, Cornelis came to Antwerp circa 1579 and visited Frans Pourbus’s workshop, but being rejected by he young master, he returned to Gillis Coignet.
Whether or not it is Frans Pourbus’s self-portrait cannot be proved on the basis of documentary evidence. The portraits of Frans Pourbus the Elder are rare and often posthumous, therefore, unreliable. Thus, the portrait engraved by Hendrik Hondius for his Theatrum Honoris offers a somewhat stiff, rather stereotyped representation of the artist, probably bearing little resemblance.The engraver may have been inspired by a now-lost portrait of Pourbus.Hondius’s portrait depicts the painter a little older and wearing a beard, although this image is not inconsistent with the present portrait.
As for the work in the Uffizzi, Florence (inv. 4059), it is most certainly not a self-portrait, contrary to what can be found in certain publications and was definitely executed later. It is therefore of no use for the identification of the present self-portrait.
What speaks in favour of the hypothesis of self-portrait is the fact that the red paint used for the signature, applied in capital letters in the paint on the base of the palette, albeit hardly legible, is the same that the paint on the tip of the brush that the painter is holding in his right hand. This suggests that the artist just finished signing his painting. Besides, it seems only logical that shortly after his marriage and acceptance to the guild, the painter executed his self-portrait in the flush of enthusiasm and pride. His technique is free, much more relaxed than in the portraits of the late 1570s, which allows us to date this work to shortly after the end of his training with Floris, an Italianate painter who spent a long of time in the Italian peninsula and brought back to Antwerp a style inspired by Michelangelo and, at the same time, by Vasari and Tintoretto.

A portrait of a man that has recently appeared on sale, dated to a bit later in his career, shows the same manner of painting clothes with large and visible brushstrokes. As for the ruff, executed in a rapid and almost careless way, albeit well brushed, it is reminiscent of the cuff of Abraham Grapheus in the Fine Art Museum of San Francisco (1957.159, donation of Mr. et Mrs. Arnold H. Bruner)."
Date circa 1570
date QS:P571,+1570-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902
Medium oil on canvas
medium QS:P186,Q296955;P186,Q12321255,P518,Q861259
Dimensions 80.5 × 215 cm (31.6 × 84.6 in)
Object history At art dealer Marty de Cambiaire
Inscriptions Signed and dated F. POURBUS 157. on the palette
Source/Photographer www.martydecambiaire.com/index.php

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This is a faithful photographic reproduction of a two-dimensional, public domain work of art. The work of art itself is in the public domain for the following reason:
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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current17:56, 2 February 2018Thumbnail for version as of 17:56, 2 February 20181,887 × 2,357 (382 KB)Kboht=={{int:filedesc}}== {{Artwork |wikidata= |artist= {{Creator:Frans Pourbus (I)}} |title= |description={{en|The Hoefnagel family}} |date= c. 1570 |medium={{Technique|1=oil|2=canvas}} |dimensions={{size|cm|80.5 |215}} |institution= |location= |notes=...

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