How to do a self portrait: the bravest form of art? (2024)

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It’s super easy to build a gorgeous artist website.No code. No credit card. Use Artweb's Website builder today How to do a self portrait: the bravest form of art? Why paint a self portrait? What makes a great self-portrait? Rembrandt: the prolific and lively self-portraits Van Gogh: the self portrait as exploration of a soul Kahlo: symbolism and brutal honesty Picasso: eight decades of self portraiture Eight tips to create the perfect self portrait #1: Feel Your Face #2: Use Multiple Mirrors #3: Make Faces #4: Experiment with Time-Lapse Photography #5: Explore your face in varied lighting #6: Change Posture #7: Stick to your own style #8: Don’t embellish or exaggerate How to draw your face: a step by step guide Paint your head Face shape Painting the mouth Painting the eyes Painting the ears Can you sell a self-portrait? Embrace the self-portrait as a career milestone Related posts: It’s super easy to build a gorgeous artist website.No code. No credit card. Use Artweb's Website builder today Ready to Grow Your Art Business? Join our bi-weekly newsletter to receive exclusive access to the free tools, discounts and marketing tips that help 66,000 artists sell more art. Recent Posts Oil Paint for Artists: Origins and Overview Online Art Competitions to Build Your Reputation The Benefits of YouTube for Artists What the Judges Say: How to Win Art Competitions The Best International Art Competitions 2023 Email Marketing for Artists: A Beginner’s Guide Search Our Blog FAQs

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  • Carol Burns

How to do a self portrait: the bravest form of art?

You may be intimately acquainted with your face. But that doesn’t mean you know how to do a self portrait. In fact, mastering the art of self-portraiture can be a lifetime’s work in itself.

Self-portraits offer an intriguing paradox. Most of us have painted them. After all, it’s easier to reach for the mirror than to cajole someone into an extended sitting. Yet, the image we see is always in reverse, and our own ideas and preconceptions of our self may get in the way of a great painting.

When painting a self portrait, should you paint the face that you feel the world sees or try to capture the depths of yourself that often stay hidden? Is your self portrait purely an exercise or will it form part of your collection? If there is interest, would you sell it or would it feel too personal? All of these questions make the self-portrait a highly challenging painting to realize.

It is important with self-portraits to separate the challenging or imperfect first self-portrait from the ultimate painting. Even if you are immensely proud of your debut effort, consider how else you can interpret your face. If you favor drawing from a mirror, remember the image is reversed. This means your self portrait will resemble your own self-perception. But to others it may be slightly startling, as no face is perfectly symmetrical.

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Why paint a self portrait?

From a practical standpoint, you are your most accessible model. That may be one reason why self portraits are so prevalent, but it’s not the only one.

A self portrait is also technically challenging. It’s a key milestone in an artist’s journey to mastering their craft. First, it requires the artist to break down something so familiar and intimate into its most basic parts (eyes, nose, mouth), and from there, to create a compelling and psychological complex work of art.

Second, most of us prefer to draw from life, but a self-portrait requires us to change focus from mirror to canvas. That means we never have a static model. As a result, we may find the limitations on movement restrict our painting technique. Conversely, it may also influence a more loose style. That very unexpected quality of the self-portrait is one of the reasons it’s such an important and ongoing part of an artist’s training and evolution.

Finally, there is the psychological challenge of the self-portrait. It isn’t easy to look yourself in the eye and say “Here I am” in a bold flurry of paint. “This is me in my most naked state.”

What makes a great self-portrait?

The simple answer is honesty. Consider how we draw or paint a stranger. We break the face down to its shapes, textures and expression. But not knowing the person can create a distance that evaporates when you capture someone you know intimately: yourself.

To begin, take instruction from the great artists who made exploring their own visage a cornerstone of their life’s work.

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Find out who else creates self-portraits on this blog: 5 Women Who Showed New Ways Forward for Self-portraiture.

Rembrandt: the prolific and lively self-portraits

Rembrandt painted so many self-portraits that we feel we know him, even at the distance of four hundred years. In fact, there are whole books devoted to the roughly 100 paintings and sketches of himself. They display his physical likeness as well as an immense sense of spirit. We see the artist age and change over time, and he uses his own face to express humor, melancholy, pride and the deterioration of age. Further, his self-portraits range from etchings to oil paintings, with the medium and style of brushwork reinforcing the narrative he tells of this human being.

The National Portrait Gallery has a fascinating film on the importance of his self portraits.

Van Gogh: the self portrait as exploration of a soul

Vincent van Gogh painted 36 very distinct representations of his face (and soul). As we look at that famous almost-smile of the Mona Lisa and wonder what amuses her, we look at van Gogh and search for signs of his state of mind.

Kahlo: symbolism and brutal honesty

Of Frida Kahlo’s 143 paintings, fully 55 were self-portraits. In fact, it’s her distinctive style, coupled with her signature upswept hairdo and exaggerated eyebrows, that make hers one of the most recognized (and reproduced) faces of any artist in history. You may want to play with media, or add symbolic objects that resonate with your culture or personal history, as she did so effectively.

Picasso: eight decades of self portraiture

Pablo Picasso began his career with a portrait on 1901. Fast forward to 1972 and Picasso, aged 90, created one of his last paintings, a self-portrait that seems to express his confusion through use of his powerful art practice. He drew and painted himself from the age of 15 and many are seen as his most important works.

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Eight tips to create the perfect self portrait

Any accomplished artist knows that you need to observe things before you can paint or draw them. The hardest part of a self-portrait is really looking at yourself. Most of us may glance in the mirror while brushing our teeth, or check our outfit before leaving the house, but we rarely focus on our faces. Even a person wearing make-up may isolate their features individually, rather than examining their whole face. Follow these tips to move beyond the cursory glance in the mirror to a deep familiarity with the lines and shapes of your features.

#1: Feel Your Face

Use your fingertips to examine the planes and shapes of your face. You might feel silly, but to create a self-portrait you need to relearn what your face looks like.

#2: Use Multiple Mirrors

Get sketching. You may normally look directly at mirrors, so you’ll be mostly familiar with a single straight on view. But set up two or three mirrors so you can see what you look like when you are not looking at yourself. You can use photography here, but sketching from real life will always be more, well, real.

#3: Make Faces

Smile, frown, purse your lips and laugh. Move your head around. It’s unlikely you want to strike a pose in a self-portrait, but it can be a good exercise to relax. Quick sketches of exaggerated facial expressions can help you relearn what your face looks like.

#4: Experiment with Time-Lapse Photography

Consider using a time-lapse camera to collect a number of different faces. To capture your true likeness, you’ll want natural facial expressions, rather than anything posed or contrived.

#5: Explore your face in varied lighting

Change the light, try harsh lighting, go soft. You will probably find, as photographer’s do, that a flat natural light works best. But it depends on your style. Harsh exaggerated shadows may suit excessive color contrasts.

#6: Change Posture

Few faces are captured straight on, passport photo-style. Turn or tilt your head, even slightly, to create expression in your posture as well as your face. Even a quick look at portraits will show painters as a group share a favored angle for self-portraiture. Sitting at a 45 degree angle and turning the face towards the viewer may feel a little clichéd, but it works. Master this tried-and-true method, at least until you feel comfortable enough to test new postures.

#7: Stick to your own style

If your work is semi-representational, or even abstracted, don’t copy the likes of Lucien Freud because you think that’s what a self-portrait looks like. Your work is a self portrait, but your unique style is as much a part of your selfie as what it depicts. The work should resonate with your medium.

#8: Don’t embellish or exaggerate

It can be tempting to embellish your own face, to hide the crinkle of crow’s feet or soften dark areas. Before you start, make a decision to present exactly what you see. Likewise, don’t highlight flaws or emphasize features that you find less becoming. Be real and honest.

Don’t let the portrait be a revelation of (low) self-esteem. Instead, see it as a study. In time, your portraits may develop into pieces that address the theme of self-perception, but before you tackle anything in such a vein, it is vital that you can paint or draw yourself with startling physical accuracy.

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How to draw your face: a step by step guide

Before you paint a self-portrait, study the shape and form, and try to distance yourself from the reality of the face before you.

Isolate your features – look at what makes up your face. There are proportions to consider: the bridge of your nose is actually the middle of your face.

We have Leonardo da Vinci and his Vitruvian Man to thank for these general rules of proportion (Your foot will also fits between the wrist and elbow, for those who like proportioning).

If you favor Chuck Close-style realism, you may want to map out your face with a soft tape measure and transfer it onto a grid.

But accuracy isn’t everything. Children tend to break the face up into thirds with the eyes sitting in the first third, nose in the second and mouth in the last one. Picasso, also followed this style with many of his later works, but, hey, he was Picasso.

Remember to sketch your full head. When presented with a person, the temptation is to draw or paint straight on. But don’t. This is not an identity card photograph.

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Paint your head

Portraits are about the face. But the head is the frame, so it’s vital to get it right. Consider the neck, side view, ears and top of the head. Leaning the head back gives a clear view of underneath the chin and the nose. You’ll discover the neck and chin consume a huge expanse of space. Examine your nostrils and the underside of the nose. Then look downwards. That perspective gives the hair a dominant view, the eyes disappear, and the brows come into full relief.

Face shape

We talk about oval, square, round and heart shaped faces, but faces come in as many shapes as people do. Features should be sketched from as many angles as possible. Notice the difference in the eyes when straight on, versus looking down or in profile.

Eyes and mouth are often the first things we notice on a face, but every feature matters. The nose can be a tricky one, but only if you try to paint the face straight on. Noses don’t have much expression, so for most of us it’s about getting the shape and shading right. Getting it wrong can quickly turn your nose monstrous.

Painting the mouth

Our most expressive feature, the mouth has many possibilities and can reflect many moods. Try drawing from slightly above and slightly below in a relaxed pose to get the full shape.

Painting the eyes

Usually the gaze is upon the viewer, but interesting results can come from side glances and downwards gazes. Downwards views will show the shape of the eye and the curve of the brow and lashes. On the other hand, looking upwards affords an opportunity to express the color and shade. Painting the eyes in a direct view can be very unforgiving, and can look blank until you relax into it.

Painting the ears

The ears are pretty static, but their size and shape can be replicated from any angle with a little practice. Look at folds on material painted by Renaissance painters to get an idea of capturing all your ear’s folds and gulleys.

For tips on getting the right color in your self-portrait, check out our blog on advice on getting the colors right in your painted portraits.

Can you sell a self-portrait?

Some of history’s best artists created self portraits that rank among their most famous (and valuable) works.

Self portraits often stand out from portraits of other people. They reveal more, there seems less distance between the canvas and the person, and the honesty is acute. Those qualities make for powerful and saleable work.

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One of Mexican painter Frida Kahlo’s final self-portraits Diego y yo (Diego and I) broke several art market records when it sold for $34.9 million in November 2021. Other valuable self portraits include Vincent van Gogh, who painted himself 35 times. An exhibition at UK’s Courtauld Gallery in 2022 was devoted entirely to his self-portraits with SelfPortrait with Bandaged Ear one if its gems.

Want to learn more about selling your art? Read our blog for advice on selling your artwork, whatever your career stage.

Embrace the self-portrait as a career milestone

Having the technical ability, artistic sensitivity and creative honesty to produce a decent self-portrait is a landmark moment in any artist’s career. While you’re unlikely to create a masterpiece on your first attempt, it’s a great exercise and will fuel your growth as an artist.

As the Irish writer James Joyce once remarked to a portraitist who said he was trying to capture the author’s soul: “Never you mind my soul, is my tie straight?”

Ready to move on to the rest of the body? Explore the history of the human body in art

Related posts:

Express yourself: the art history of the selfieWhat are the Best Surfaces for Oil Painting?Do You Dare Take On the Challenge of Nude Self-Portrait?Great Artists and the Color Yellow in Art Through History

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How to do a self portrait: the bravest form of art? (2024)

FAQs

What is the art form of self-portrait? ›

A self-portrait is a work of art, like a picture or a sculpture, that an artist has made of themselves. Every artist is different, so every self-portrait is different too. A self-portrait can look like the artist who made it, or a self-portrait can look more abstract.

What is a self-portrait example? ›

Most self-portraits are images of the full frontal face or a head shot, but abstract or creative works may show, for example, one nervous eye, or the artist's hand and paint brush, as the focus.

What are the elements of a self-portrait? ›

There are a number of components that need to be considered in shooting a conceptual self-portrait including pose, wardrobe, location, lighting and props as well what post-production techniques will be used plus any additional elements that need to be captured.

How did Frida Kahlo create her self-portrait? ›

Her father built her an easel for her hospital bed, so she could paint, and Kahlo made self-portraits as a distraction from the pain. People thought Kahlo's paintings were surrealist, because it seemed like a mixture between fact and fantasy.

What was Frida Kahlo's painting technique? ›

Frida Kahlo used techniques that included vibrant colors in a style that was influenced by indigenous cultures of Mexico, and European influences including Realism, Symbolism, and Surrealism. Kahlo used oil paint and Masonite boards. Her oil paints were slow drying paints made from powdered pigment mixed.

What type of art is portrait? ›

Portraits are a visual representation of a person which can be created in any artistic medium. Portraits of people are often in traditional oil paintings, and more recently photographs. However, sculpture and even mixed media artworks can also be portraits.

What is the genre of self-portraiture? ›

The self-portrait as we know it today focuses on the artist themselves, often with eyes fixed on the viewer. It's a bold art form, requiring the artist to examine themselves as a subject and to situate their body in the canon. The self-portrait can be a practice of therapy, self-discovery, or personal myth-making.

What is the art form of self expression? ›

And art is a powerful medium for self-expression. It can help children to explore their emotions in a safe and non-verbal way. It allows them to express themselves through play, experimentation, storytelling, and the use of metaphors to represent their feelings.

What is portrait style? ›

Portrait photography, or portraiture, is a type of photography aimed toward capturing the personality of a person or group of people by using effective lighting, backdrops, and poses. A portrait photograph may be artistic or clinical.

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