Self Portrait In A Straw Hat (After 1782) by Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun
Title
Self Portrait In A Straw Hat
Artist
Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun (1755–1842), French
Date
After 1782
Medium
Oil on canvas
Collection
National Gallery, London
License
Public Domain Content: Free for Personal & Commercial Use
4320 x 6000 pixels, JPEG, 9.46 MB
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About the Artist
Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun (1755–1842), French, A master of portraiture whose work radiated warmth and intimacy, she became one of the most sought-after painters of 18th-century Europe. Born in Paris, her talent emerged early—she was painting professionally by her teens, a rarity for women in an era dominated by male artists. Her style blended Rococo elegance with a neoclassical clarity, capturing not just likeness but the vivacity of her subjects. Marie Antoinette, her most famous patron, sat for over 30 portraits, their collaboration defying stiff court conventions; the queen appeared in simple muslin dresses, a controversial departure from rigid formality. Exiled during the French Revolution, she traveled across Europe, painting aristocrats and intellectuals from St. Petersburg to Vienna. Her ability to convey texture—the sheen of silk, the softness of skin—was unmatched, yet it was her psychological insight that set her apart. Unlike contemporaries who idealized their sitters, she revealed fleeting emotions: a child’s mischief, a noblewoman’s quiet resolve. Later works, influenced by her travels, adopted darker tones and bolder compositions, though she never abandoned her signature luminosity. By her death, she had painted over 600 portraits, leaving a legacy that redefined femininity and power in art.
Artwork Story
Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun’s Self Portrait In A Straw Hat captures the artist in a moment of radiant confidence, her gaze meeting the viewer with quiet assurance. The loose brushstrokes bring life to the delicate play of light on her straw hat, its ribbons fluttering as if caught in a gentle breeze. Soft pinks and warm browns dominate the palette, lending an air of effortless elegance to the composition. What fascinates most is how she balances self-representation with artistic flair—the hat isn’t just an accessory but a statement, echoing the pastoral charm of 18th-century fashion while asserting her identity as a woman unafraid to command the canvas.
Behind the portrait’s apparent simplicity lies a subtle defiance. Vigée Le Brun painted this work as a response to Rubens’ Chapeau de Paille, reimagining the male artist’s vision through her own lens. The play of shadows across her face suggests both vulnerability and resilience, a duality familiar to female artists of her time. Notice how her hands rest lightly, almost casually—no props, no pretenses. It’s a masterclass in self-portraiture, where every stroke feels deliberate yet spontaneous, as though she’s inviting us into a conversation that’s lasted centuries.