Not on display
Wikimedia Commons

Self-Portrait

Louis Gurlitt (1812 - 1897)

Artist/Maker

DatesSigned: Signed 1833

Material / Technique

Oil on canvas

Dimensionsh x w: Mått 24,3 x 18 cm h x w: Ram 29,6 x 23,6 cm

Inventory numberNM 7375

AcqusitionInventoried 2017 (Purchase 2016 Wiros Fund)

Other titlesTitle (sv): Självporträtt Title (en): Self-Portrait

DescriptionDescription: This self-portrait was painted in 1833 by the 21-year-old Gurlitt. It shows a young, self-conscious artist wearing an elegant green painter’s smock to keep spots of oil paint off the neat outfit underneath. That same year, Gurlitt received the academy’s silver medal – an outward expression of the fact that, even while still a student, he was seen as one of Danish art’s great hopes for the future. This was chiefly on account of his landscapes from the North Zealand countryside north of Copenhagen. Catalogue raisonné: New Aquisition June 2017 Nationalmuseum has acquired three works by the German-Danish artist Louis Gurlitt (1812–97), which between them illustrate different aspects of the artist’s diverse oeuvre. Gurlitt studied in Copenhagen and early in his career was considered a promising figure in Danish painting. By the mid-19th century, however, his name had been erased from Danish art history as a result of the border wars with Germany arising from the Schleswig-Holstein question. Now, he is once again considered a major figure of the Danish golden age, while also embodying its close connections to the German art of the period. Louis Gurlitt was born in Altona, just west of Hamburg, which until 1864 was the second largest city under the Danish crown. After initial art studies in Hamburg, in 1832 he was accepted as a student by the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, where his teachers included Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg. The self-portrait recently acquired at auction in Paris was painted in 1833 by the 21-year-old Gurlitt. It shows a young, self-conscious artist wearing an elegant green painter’s smock to keep spots of oil paint off the neat outfit underneath. That same year, Gurlitt received the academy’s silver medal – an outward expression of the fact that, even while still a student, he was seen as one of Danish art’s great hopes for the future. This was chiefly on account of his landscapes from the Nordsjælland countryside north of Copenhagen. Wishing to broaden his horizons beyond Denmark, Gurlitt travelled abroad, first to Munich in 1836–37. The German artists of the time were clearly the main role models for his paintings of glorified landscapes and his subtle treatment of light effects. An example of the latter is evident in another of Nationalmuseum’s new acquisitions, a landscape from Berchtesgaden in the Bavarian Alps. The main subject is an old mill supplied with water through an apparently fragile structure. The mill race has sprung a leak at one point, and water is pouring from it to the ground below. Gurlitt subtly captures the cascading water sparkling in the sunlight. Gurlitt spent the years that followed in Bavaria and northern Italy before returning to Copenhagen, where in 1840 he was made a member of the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. His admission piece, a landscape from Silkeborg in Jutland, was a strategic choice, since Jutland was seen as both exotic and yet deeply Danish. Notwithstanding this and several commissions from King Christian VIII, nothing was able to keep Gurlitt in Denmark. As a German-speaking subject from one of Denmark’s duchies in northern Germany, he could probably sense the rising tide of Danish nationalism. So Gurlitt set course for the south again, heading first to Italy. He was one of a series of colleagues from Copenhagen who sought out picturesque motifs around Rome and Naples. Købke, Petzholdt and Hansen had already painted the magnificent Marina Piccola on Capri before him, yet few artists were as successful as Gurlitt in capturing the subject in all its detail. Through the Danish art trade, Nationalmuseum has managed to acquire one of Gurlitt’s studio versions of this motif, painted in Rome in 1844. Despite the artistic and technical brilliance of this work, Louis Gurlitt remains one of the most underrated landscape painters of the 19th century. The purchase of these works was made possible by a generous donation from the Wiros Fund. Nationalmuseum has no budget of its own for new acquisitions, but relies on gifting and financial support from private funds and foundations to enhance its collections of fine art and craft.

Depicted Person

Motif categorySelf-portrait

Collection

MaterialOil paint, Duk

TechniquePainting

Object category

Keyword