A charcoal portrait shows a young woman, centered and facing forward, cropped from the upper chest to just above her head covering. Her gaze meets ours from large, almond-shaped eyes with softly shaded lids, straight brows, and a calm, unsmiling mouth. Dark hair is parted down the middle and disappears beneath a layered headwrap. A patterned band of repeating curves frames her forehead, while a veil drapes outward on both sides like a hood, its folds drawn with long, confident strokes. Dutch artist Jan Verkade models her face with light-to-deeper gray shading along the cheeks and under the eyes, leaving highlights as bare paper so her features feel quietly luminous. At her neck, a high collar closes with a small ringed clasp, and a second small ring or pendant hangs just below. The shoulders and garment are sketched more loosely, keeping attention on her face, veil, and steady presence against an unadorned gray ground. Dated 1910, the drawing balances immediacy and restraint since charcoal allows quick decisions like contour, shadow, and softened transitions, but Verkade avoids theatrical effects. The frontal, symmetrical composition is almost like a formal “encounter,” where dignity comes from stillness rather than pose. The title (“palestinienne”) reflects a broad, place-based label common in European cataloging of the period. The image itself pushes back against typecasting by giving the young woman individuality through eye contact and specific, attentive observation like the weight of the veil, the patterned band, and the precise set of her mouth. By 1910, Verkade was living as Dom Willibrord Verkade, a Benedictine associated with the Beuron art milieu. As an artist shaped by both modernist circles and religious life, this portrait could be a study in presence which is simplified, focused, and quietly reverent, where the most emphasized “detail” is not costume, but the girl’s gaze.
“Portrait de palestinienne (Portrait of a Palestinian woman)” by Jan Verkade (Dutch) - Charcoal on paper / 1910 - Musée de Pont-Aven (France) #WomenInArt #JanVerkade #Verkade #MuséedePont-Aven #MuseeDePontAven #CharcoalDrawing #Palestine #art #artText #PortraitofaGirl #BlueskyArt #arte #FrenchArtist