The Self-Promotion of a Libertine Bad Boy

Autor: Joyce Zelen
Jazyk: English<br />Dutch; Flemish
Rok vydání: 2018
Předmět:
Zdroj: The Rijksmuseum Bulletin, Vol 66, Iss 4 (2018)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 1877-8127
2772-6126
DOI: 10.52476/trb.9764
Popis: The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam owns one of the most curious portraits ever made in the seventeenth century – the likeness of the Dutch classical scholar and notorious erotomaniac Hadriaan Beverland (1650-1716), who was banished from the Dutch Republic in 1679 because of his scandalous publications. In the portrait – a brunaille – the libertine rake sits at a table with a prostitute; a provocative scene. Why did this young humanist promote such a confrontational image of himself? In this article the author analyses the portrait and explores Beverland’s motives for his remarkable manner of self-promotion, going on to argue that it was the starting point for a calculated campaign of portraits. Over the years Beverland commissioned at least four more portraits of himself, including one in which he is shown drawing the naked back of a statue of Venus. Each of his portraits was conceived with a view to giving his changeable reputation a push in the right direction. They attest to a remarkable and extraordinarily self-assured expression of identity seldom encountered in seventeenth-century portraiture.
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