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Self-Portrait
Self-Portrait
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

Self-Portrait

Artist (American, probably born in England, died about 1691)
Dateabout 1680
Mediumoil on canvas
Dimensionscanvas: 62.9 × 60.3 cm (24 3/4 × 23 3/4 in.)
framed: 71.8 × 68.4 cm (28 1/4 × 26 15/16 in.)
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Terms
Object number1948.19
DescriptionThomas Smith's Self-Portrait is a half-length representation of a seated man facing three-quarters left. The man's gray hair is parted in the center and shoulder length. Long, individual strokes of gray and white are painted over broadly painted areas of gray and brown. The man's features are slightly stylized and sharply modeled. His blue eyes bulge under drooping eyelids and look directly at the viewer. The skin is wrinkled at the outer corner of the proper left eye and at the bridge of the nose. A light pink highlight runs the length of the nose and draws attention to its prominent size. The mouth is straight, and the upper lip has a gray shadow that extends into the creases around the mouth. The chin is round, with a fleshy throat just below. The skin tones vary from light pink under the eyes and on the chin to darker pink on the cheeks and gray in the creases along the mouth and in the shadows. Some of the ground color shows through the flesh tones on the nose and above the mouth.

The man's coat is black and indistinct, due in part to the blanched surface of the painting. The most prominent feature of the costume is a ruffled lace neck cloth, which is gathered at the throat. The lace pattern features a matrix of crossed lines with a design of cascading vines and stylized flowers. The man's proper right hand rests on top of a skull. The four fingers conform to the curvature of the skull, and the tip of the thumb extends in the air slightly. The hollowed-out eyes are nearly perfectly circular, and the hole of the nose is simplified to an inverted heart. A band of tiny teeth form a slight arc. Below the skull is a sheet of white paper on which a poem and monogram signature have been inscribed within faintly visible ruled lines. The paper extends over the edge of the red cloth-covered table on which it sits. Though the artist took care to paint highlights to suggest the folded paper occupying space, he also tipped the letter up unrealistically to allow the viewer to read the text easily.

Smith sits in a red upholstered chair trimmed with a yellow border along the top edge. Large yellow tacks secure the red fabric to the chair frame. Only a corner of the chair is visible to the viewer. Above the chair is a red curtain with several folds defined by wide black lines. The curtain is held in place by a cord, from which hangs a yellow tassel. This drapery is placed against a solid field of unmodulated black. At the upper left corner of the painting is a vertically oriented rectangle, which presumably represents a window. Visible in this scene is a naval battle and a fortress. The battle features three ships, the nearest of which lists in the water, presumably vanquished by one or both of the other vessels. The closest of the two upright ships is turned nearly in profile for the viewer, revealing at least ten gun portals. At the stern of this ship flies a red flag with a loosely painted white design in its field. The distant ship is parallel to the middle ground ship and flies three flags—a rectangular flag with a red, white, and blue stripe at the stern and at the top of the middle mast and a blue pennant on the next mast forward. Orange flames rise up between the two ships, suggesting that they are engaged in battle with each other or with another vessel beyond view. A touch of blue is visible in the sky, which is mainly filled with large clouds that blend with the smoke. A red flag on the lower portion of the fort in the foreground features three crescents and a small circle in the concave curve of each crescent. A plain red flag flies on top of the fort's highest tower.
Label TextThis painting is the earliest known American self-portrait, and the only known 17th-century New England portrait by an identified artist. An account book at Harvard College records Smith as a portrait painter. The naval battle in the background, with ships flying British and Dutch flags, suggests Smith also had a maritime career. Beyond that, his biography is difficult to determine with certainty, since at least three mariners named Thomas Smith lived in the Boston area at the end of the 17th century. This self-portrait reflects a shift in American art from the highly decorative, Elizabethan style to the three-dimensional baroque style. Employing light and shadow to create an illusion of space, Smith masterfully captures his somber, yet astute presence, indicated by his black attire. Objects like the skull and octonaire—an eight-line devotional lyric, with the artist’s initials (“T S”)—signal the prominent themes of human mortality and vanity in Puritan culture. ProvenanceDescended in the family from Thomas Smith to his daughter Maria Catherina Smith Gross Mears (Mrs. William Gross, later Mrs. Samuel Mears) (b. 1670–73. d. 1703/4–06); to her daughter Catherina Mears Dexter (Mrs. Samuel Dexter; later Mrs. Samuel Barnard) (1701–1797); to Catherina Dexter Haven (Mrs. Joseph Haven) (1737–1814); to her grandson Samuel Foster Haven, mid nineteenth century; to his nephew the Rev. Samuel Haven Hilliard, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts; to his son Edmund B. Hilliard; purchased by the Worcester Art Museum, 1948.
On View
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