National Portrait Gallery Logo - link to our homepage NPG nav image for Monday
National Portrait Gallery Homepage Search The Collection What's On? About the Gallery
Visitor Information National Portrait Gallery Around the Country Search the Website
Education Research Publications Picture Library Gift & Bookshop Membership Sponsorship Venue Hire Press
You are in National Portrait Gallery | What's on? | Self-Portrait: Renaissance to Contemporary
Whats onregister for our e-newsletter


PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE

SELF PORTRAIT:
Renaissance to Contemporary

20 October 2005 - 29 January 2006
Wolfson and Ground Floor Galleries
Admission £8 / £5.25
Last admission:
- 17.00 Sunday to Wednesday
- 20.00 Thursday & Friday

Become a member and
see the exhibition for free



Self-Portrait at the Easel Painting a Devotional Panel
by Sofonisba Anguissola, 1556
© Muzeum-Zarnek, Lancut, Poland

Sponsored by Channel 4

On Tour | Publication | Related Publication | In the Collection | Further Links

SELF PORTRAIT Renaissance to Contemporary is the first large-scale exhibition to bring artists' own images together from across periods and places within the tradition of western painting. From Jan van Eyck to Jenny Saville, visitors will enjoy many portraits rarely seen outside the collections and cities in which they are permanently displayed. The appeal of this genre of painting is well known, and this exhibition explores the diversity of the image through which the artist is represented.

Sponsored by Channel 4, this major exhibition brings together a painted self-portrait by 56 of the world's greatest artists from 1433 right up to the present day, including 14 by women painters. Works by artists renowned for their self-portraits such as Rembrandt, van Gogh, Kahlo and Bacon will be included alongside works by less well-known artists such as Pieter van Laer, Johannes Gumpp and Hans Thoma, whose self-portraits are of exceptional quality and interest. The international range of artists represented includes Carracci, Velázquez, Hogarth, Kauffmann, Courbet, Warhol, Hopper, and Freud.

Focusing on the self-portrait through oils, SELF PORTRAIT: Renaissance to Contemporary traces continuity and change in this genre over 500 years and the particular importance of the medium of oil paint to its development. It is especially concerned with the ways in which portrait likenesses can express the creativity and inventiveness of the artist. The exhibition includes seven early works from the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, where the collection of self-portraits begun by the Medici - now displayed in the "Vasari corridor" - is the most important and famous group of self-portraits in the world. Other important loans come from the Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid, The National Gallery of Art, Washington, The Museum of Modern Art, New York and the Musée d'Orsay, Paris. British loans come from the Royal Collection, The National Gallery, Tate, and English Heritage.

A new large self-portrait by the American artist Chuck Close has been painted especially for the exhibition. Chuck Close will also be talking to Tim Marlow about his career at 7pm on Friday 21 October at the Gallery in the first of a series of artists talks which accompany the exhibition.

This exhibition is jointly organised by the National Portrait Gallery, London and the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney. It is curated by Anthony Bond, Head Curator at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, and Dr Joanna Woodall of the Courtauld Institute of Art.

Publications & Gifts
-
A fully illustrated book accompanies this international exhibition by curators Anthony Bond and Joanna Woodall, with further essays by T.J. Clark, Ludmilla Jordanova and Joseph Leo Koerner.
Exhibition price £30 (hardback) and £22.50 (paperback).

- A concise introduction to the Gallery's collection of self-portraits is also available, price £9.99.

Links
- Look At Me exhibition
- A Question of Identity: Self-Portrait Photographs display
- Slide Lectures for Secondary Art Students School Groups

- Art Gallery of New South Wales


home | search the collection | what's on? | about the gallery | visitor information | npg around the country | search the website
education | research | publications | picture library | gift & bookshop | membership | sponsorship | venue hire | press

Betsie icon Go to a large print, text-only
version of this site

All images and text are subject to copyright protection. 06 October 2008


Comments and suggestions

National Portrait Gallery, St Martin's Place, London WC2H 0HE. Tel: 020 7306 0055