Self Portrait
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Questions for Philisophical Discussion
Self-Portrait
- What features of this self-portrait stand out for you?
- What expression does Rembrandt have in the portrait?
- Is this portrait beautiful?
Compare and Contrast
Open the discussion guides for some of the other portraits on this site: Portrait of Madame X, Michael Borges Study, and Woman with Hat. After you’ve studied those images a bit, discuss the questions below.
- Which of the portraits/self-portraits you looked at is your favorite? What makes it your favorite?
- Why do you like it better than the other ones?
- Do you think that painting is beautiful? Which features of the painting contribute most to its beauty? For example, the colors, the detailed representation of the person, or its accuracy? Would you say that all works that have that or those features are beautiful?
- Can a painting be beautiful even if its subject is not? That is, if the person who is featured in the portrait is not beautiful or handsome, can the painting still be? What is the relationship between the person portrayed and the portrait itself?
- Is beauty the only term you would use to praise your favorite portrait? Try to think of other terms that evaluate that painting but that go beyond merely calling it beautiful? For example, might you praise your favorite portrait for being accurate, expressive, intimate, etc.? Are these other terms important to your understanding of the painting?
- Some philosophers maintain that our knowledge of our own minds is different than our knowledge of the minds of others. Do you think this is true? That is, do you know your own state of mind in a different way than you know the state of mind of others? Is your knowledge of yourself more certain than you knowledge of others? In what ways if any? Are there features of a self-portrait that distinguish it from a portrait of someone else? Are these related to the difference between self-knowledge and knowledge of other people’s minds?
- Jean-Paul Sartre, the famous Existentialist philosopher, thought that the “look of the other” was always objectifying. Based on the paintings you have looked at, do you think that painters necessarily objectify their subjects? Do we always objectify others? Is that necessarily a bad thing? Does this claim apply any differently to a self-portrait? Justify your answers.
Additional Resources
More information from the Metropolitan Museum of Art on this painting, including an audio guide
Portraiture Overview and Resources
Portraits are visual representations of individual people. Painted portraits were common until the invention of photography in the middle of the nineteenth century. When looking at portraits, it’s important to engage not only with the person depicted in the work of art, it’s also important to discuss the artistic choices the portraitist made when creating the image.
Three issues are raised by the philosophical questions in this unit: the nature of beauty; how self-knowledge differs from the knowledge we have of others; and whether objectification always enters into our perception of others. These are difficult and interesting questions. Here are some resources to help students grapple with these questions.
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on beauty
Philosophy Talk episode: “What is beauty?”
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on self-knowledge
Philosophy Talk episode on the self and self-presentation
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Sartre and objectification
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