Head of an Oriental

Cleveland Museum of Art

Head of an Oriental

Jan Lievens
Date
1600s
Medium
etching
Culture
Netherlands
Department
Prints
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

As Europeans more actively engaged in sea travel and trade in the 1600s, references to distant locales became popular among artists. This is one of a series of head studies of men in Turkish costume created by Jan Lievens in the 1630s. He sketched this bearded, turbaned man loosely but with precise details, such as the paisley pattern, a traditional Persian design, on his scarf. While making this print, Lievens shared a studio with Rembrandt, and the artists’ shared a mutual emphasis on sketching freely with an etching needle.

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