Skip to main content

Self-Portrait

(French, 1861–1932)
about 1905
Medium/TechniqueBrown ink on paper
DimensionsSheet: 22.5 × 34 cm (8 7/8 × 13 3/8 in.)
Credit LineFanny P. Mason Fund in memory of Alice Thevin
Accession number2019.771
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsDrawings
Description
Almost satyr-like with his wild, curling hair and beard, Louis Anquetin catches himself with a sidelong glance, challenging us with an intense, one-eyed gaze. Throughout the 1890s, the artist returned again and again to this sort of self-portrait --- sometimes in paint, but more often and most effectively in quick pen sketches like this one. What is the character of that gaze? It is clearly an interrogation, but of whom? Himself? Us? Anquetin is best known for his colorful views of Parisian nightlife, filled with figures from the demimonde; in those works he turned his eye on others, but never with as much intensity or fervor as here.
ProvenanceFrom the artist to his atelier; November 28, 2008, Anquetin atelier sale, Thierry de Maigret, Paris, part of lot 404, bought in. About 2018, sold from a private collection, Paris, to Eric Gillis Fine Art, Brussels; 2019, sold by Eric Gillis Fine Art to the MFA. (Accession Date: June 19, 2019)
L'Arrivée
Louis Anquetin
Dappled Draught Horse Being Shod
Jean Louis André Théodore Géricault
about 1823
Scene of the Plague (Drame de la Peste)
Jean Louis André Théodore Géricault
1808–12
Ossian
Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson
Laughing Man
Louis-Léopold Boilly
undated
Alexandre-Louis-Marie Charpentier
1891
Alexandre-Louis-Marie Charpentier
1891
La pietà
Jean Louis Forain