Celebrated as one of England’s greatest and most progressive landscape artists, John Constable drew lifelong inspiration from his native Suffolk. He made hundreds of outdoor oil sketches, which capture the changing skies with near scientific precision; these helped him bring an immediacy and authenticity to exhibition works developed in the studio.
This chalk study was made during the period that Constable was a student at the Royal Academy Schools, London. Young artists would often depict themselves if models were not available. The direct, frontal gaze with slightly misaligned eyes makes the drawing exceptionally immediate and arresting.
National Portrait Gallery, London
Purchased, 1892
© National Portrait Gallery, London