Self-Portrait (Chassériau)

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Self-Portrait
Musée du Louvre, Paris

Self-Portrait, or Portrait of the Artist in a Redingote, is an oil-on-canvas painting by French

Musée du Louvre, in Paris
.

Description and analysis

One of the few self-portraits Chassériau painted, Portrait of the Artist in a Redingote shows him standing and facing left, one hand concealed within his black jacket, a small book held within his other hand, at rest upon a red tablecloth. In the background is a gray-green wall, upon which hangs a palette in the upper left corner. The painter's pose is elegant, and his gaze has been described as "astonishingly young, and at the same time, weary".[1]

Although the painting has been compared to classical and contemporary prototypes—portraits by

Ingres have been cited as inspirations—the painting is consistent with a series of portraits of family members painted by Chassériau in his youth.[1] The portrait is a frank portrayal of Chassériau's unattractive features, much commented upon during his life: Alice Ozy, later his mistress, referred to him as "the monkey".[1] By comparison, a self-portrait of 1838, also in the Louvre, appears more idealized.[1]

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