I thought of that comment as I was browsing through a catalog of an old exhibition of paintings from the Hermitage. I find many Old Master portraits dead boring; the worst are the ones of high-status sitters, who probably came in with strong opinions about what a portrait is supposed to look like:
Gerard Ter Borch
Portrait of Catarina van Leunink (between 1654-81)
State Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia
On the other hand, I was stunned by this Ter Bruggen - it is a jumble of faces, hands, and objects, obviously placed for compositional interest.
Hendrik Ter Bruggen
Concert, 1626
State Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia
Jusepe de Ribera
Penitent Saint Peter, 1628-32
Art Institue of Chicago
Nominally, the Ter Bruggen and the Ribera are not portraits, but genre scenes and religious paintings respectively. However, all three pictures here are "paintings of faces". You can argue in favor of the first that it conveys a lot of psychological depth and other like things that people say about portraits, but compositionally it is pretty dull.
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