Ressemblance Garantie by Unknown Artist - 19th Century - 65 by 54.9 cm private collection Ressemblance Garantie by Unknown Artist - 19th Century - 65 by 54.9 cm private collection

Ressemblance Garantie

oil on panel • 65 by 54.9 cm
  • Unknown Artist Unknown Artist 19th Century

This trompe l'œil painting of a grinning boy poking his head through a canvas seems to take aim at painting in favor of photography in the mid- to late 19th-century debate over which art was truer to life. A painting of a boy coming through a painted canvas with the phrase Ressemblance Garantie, or resemblance guaranteed, written on the back— is layered and plays on the inherent trickery of mimesis in either medium. Early portrait photographers claimed guaranteed resemblance as a selling point for their services, touting the direct and ostensibly objective science of photography over the mediated and subjective art of painting. Holding what appears to be a paintbrush in his right hand, the boy smiles at the viewer as if to say, "I'm a real boy."

It is a joke that only a very skilled painter could make! Such a shame we don't know who painted it!

P.S. Optical illusions are nothing new in art history! See how artists deceived the eye throughout the centuries. 

P.P.S. If you like such unexpected masterpieces, please check our artsy calendars for 2023.  :) You won't feel disappointed!