arrow-down-dottedarrow-down-mediumarrow-left-bigarrow-left-smallarrow-right-bigarrow-right-mediumarrow-right-smallarrow-up-bigarrow-up-mediumcheckbox-checkedcheckboxchevron-down-mediumchevron-down-smallchevron-up-mediumchevron-up-smallclose-bigclosecollectioncompare-sliderdownloadexternal-linkgrid-decreasegrid-increaseinfomenuminus-bigminusmutedon-viewpauseplay-cleanplayplus-bigplusrotatescalesearchsetsize-downsize-upunionunmutedzoom

Self-Portrait with Portrait of Gauguin

Currently on view

Emile Bernard (1868 - 1941), Pont-Aven, 1888

oil on canvas, 46 cm x 56 cm

Credits (obliged to state): Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation)

Bernard painted this self-portrait in the French seaside village of Pont-Aven. He was working there with Paul Gauguin (shown in the background of the picture). A Japanese woodcut print is visible at bottom right.

Van Gogh had asked his two friends to make portraits of each other. But Bernard didn’t dare: he was only 20 and intimidated by Gauguin, who was twice his age. So each of them sent a self-portrait featuring a sketch of the other. Beside his signature, Bernard wrote a dedication to his friend (‘copain’) Van Gogh. The added ‘g’ at the end of ‘copain’ was a joke about the local accent in Provence, where Van Gogh was living.