A groep of Guardsmen — History & Facts
In the earliest known Dutch militia portrait, no fewer than seventeen men gaze at us with pride, including, at the upper right, the painter himself holding a paintbrush. The man fourth from the right in the bottom row is probably the captain. The militias were responsible for urban order, public safety and the defence of the city.
This group portrait is a textbook example of bourgeois self-awareness and confidence, and typically Dutch.
More Artworks by Dirck Jacobsz
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Las meninas
Diego Velázquez

Self-portrait with a Bandaged Ear and Pipe
Unidentified artist

Girl with a Pearl Earring
Johannes Vermeer

The Sampling Officials of the Amsterdam Drapers’ Guild, Known as ‘The Syndics’
Rembrandt van Rijn

The Hundred Guilder Print: the man seen on the back in the lower left corner
Rembrandt van Rijn

Portrait of Dr Gachet
Vincent van Gogh

