this too
Tuesday, November 08, 2005
  Self-portraits



Riveting stuff in the National Portrait Gallery’s current exhibition of self-portraits. That look. The steely, sometimes sidelong, sometimes straight-on look. The deep, defiant, shifty look we only give ourselves. How unusually quiet the rather crowded gallery was, people murmuring at most in their companions’ ears, more often wrapped in their own trance of staring, catching, looking back.

And then Mr Munch at the Royal Academy, also including many self-portraits. What a harsh, unblinking, but rarely unkind gaze into his own face. What unexpectedly glorious colour and pattern and cold, dense Northern light. Our fixation on The Scream seems like a typical media obsession with only the bad news. (okay, The Vampire is pretty unforgivable).

So self-portrait paintings, the ultimate in self-obsession, reach out by compelling attention and empathy. Does the same apply to self-portraits in words? Which brings me back to qualms about self-exposing blog-posts, qualms which linger despite moving links and unexpected positive feedback. Oh well, done now. Let them go.
 
Comments:
Congratulations on "Post of the Week"! It's well deserved.
 
What's done is done. And it was well done. Congrats indeed!
 
Comment posted at Richard's, that you would better be able to answer... And congratulations on Post of the Week -

The self portrait certainly interesting - as much for what we choose to reveal as to conceal. And I agree with you, Richard. Our composing of ourselves & our lives through our blog writing is quite wonderful, often profound.

But I do wonder if self portraiture is a genre that began at a point in time; I've been sitting here trying to think if the Greeks composed images of themselves, or the Romans, definitely not Byzantia, but by the Middle Ages? Did Chaucer put himself somewhere in the Canterbury Tales...? Or was the self portrait mainly a Renaissance development?

Maybe I should paste these questions over at Jean's... surely addressed in the show she wrote of.

(which I'm doing now -:)

xo
 
Congratulations from me too, Jean! I recognise the honour was earned at a price, though.

I'm with you re the internal debates about how much to disclose. Self-disclosure on my blog (and in comments on others) is like a fire hydrant with me, either full on and I feel I've revealed too much, or right off, and there's nothng of me, no warmth at all. I hope the balance will come with time.
 
.. and FWIW, I think the posts you are concerned about were wonderful!
 
Yes, Brenda, the London exhibition did indeed start with renaissance paintings and your question was one of those it sought to provoke, I think.

But, as the late lamented blogger Abdul Walid of Acerbia remarked some time last year - so I can't put a link, damn him - self-portraits in words and bloggy-type personal writing go back much further... I remember he reminded me that in school Latin classes I loved the works of Pliny the Younger for all the reasons I love blogs.

Thanks for the congratulations, all.

Mary, you do yourself an injustice, I think. Maybe fluctuations of tone and fluctuating degrees of self-revelation are just human, and actually quite attractive and revealing in themselves? Like the huge variety of style and degrees of detail in many self-portraits in the Munch exhibition? Probably laboured this metaphor enough, but there is something in it...
 
Email received from Natalie [ http://www.nataliedarbeloff.com/blaugustine.html ], whose comment here met with error messages:

Jean, my congratulations added to the rest. Goes to show you that the secret stuff is often worth extracting from our minds/mines/guts and finds
surprising echoes.
Excellent photo you took of the Self Portrait show and your comments on it too. Did I already say that I went to it on Saturday?

Brenda, the ancient Greeks, Romans, Egyptians were certainly fine portraitists and I'm sure there must have been some self-portraits amongst all those works. But since the artists/sculptors/craftsmen were hired by royalty or other influential patrons to create their likenesses, the concept
of art for art's sake didn't yet exist. I imagine that if they used themselves as models, the artists probably kept the results to themselves. The whole idea of the Artist as Personality, as star, was most likely a
Renaissance invention.
 
Grr, Blogger always does that with url's. Natalie's address ends with " /blaugustine.html "
 
Jean, I've begun to answer your questions in the comments at my site. Look under El Refugio. :-)
 
Thank you for clearing up for me this question, which I would have taken the time to research if I hadn't been so busy making my daily word quotas. :)

The rise of the self-portrait as a distinct genre probably occured in tandem with an increasing sense of individuality historically which is part of the movement ultimately towards democracy, where individuals are recognized, given rights. Much to ponder on here...

And it's most interesting to consider that the self-reflection that we take for granted with our cameras essentially began at a certain point in history. That the way people perceived themselves before that was most likely quite different.

What if you rarely or almost never saw a reflection of yourself?

Thank you, Jean, and Natalie. xo
 
Two thoughts on self portraits.
Having modeled for drawing classes, I noticed artists always drew themselves- I was reference, but what they produced expressed who they were.

I think painters paint themselves because they are there. I write my own experiences because I have a right to them, like cutting my own hair. I need have no worries about anyone else's privacy. It is the raw material we each own. From cave outlines of hands to photos of ourselves in mirrors.

So, I don't think it is necessarily narcissistic. Rather, I figure my inner life is not unique, and that I simply have a unique view on the pool of our collective un/ consciousness. I have a right, maybe even an obligation, to share with those who can connect.
 
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