• Rembrandt was the Dutch Golden Age's greatest portraitist, and almost modern in his emphasis on self-portraits, painted continually throughout his career.
  • Rembrandt's self-portraits were created by the artist looking at himself in a mirror,[16] and the paintings and drawings therefore reverse his actual features.
  • Self-portrait at the age of 63, dated 1669, the year he died. National Gallery, London. Other artworks by Rembrandt. Drawing is an important tool of expression.
  • Rembrandt’s Self Portrait at the Age of 63, 1669 was one of the last self-portraits he would ever make before his death later the same year.
  • Rembrandt’s self-portraits were made by the artist staring in the mirror at himself, and the artworks and sketches thereby reverse his true characteristics.
  • The text of Van Swieten does not merely hold these words but comes with the two Rembrandt Self-Portrait pictures and a few etchings from the same period.
  • A collection of self-portraits by the Dutch painter. rembrandt1. ... Selfportrait_Rembrandt21. Self-Portrait at the Age of Sixty-Three, 1669.
  • Many of these traditional studies focused particularly on Rembrandt's late self-portraits, as they reveal this rigorous self-reflection most profoundly.
  • This painting is interesting because Rembrandt chose to conceal his character in this self-portrait through the use of chiaroscuro.