The Pupils

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Year2001
Dimensions70 cm × 60 cm (28 in × 24 in)
The Pupils
ArtistMichaël Borremans
Year2001
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions70 cm × 60 cm (28 in × 24 in)

The Pupils is an oil on canvas painting made in 2001 by the Belgian Michaël Borremans. It depicts three young men, each looking down at an upturned head, with thin white lines between the eyes of the heads above and below. The title plays with the two meanings of the word pupil. Critics have described how the impression of The Pupils changes as the viewer discovers its details. They say it may reflect the relationship between the painting and viewer, it appears both familiar and incomprehensible, and it may be about self-doubt. It was shown at a Borremans exhibition held in Ghent, London, and Dublin in 2005.

The Pupils shows three young men in factory overalls, sitting or standing in a diagonal row. Each man looks alike and bends over an upturned head in front of him. Two of the men touch the faces of the heads as if studying them or applying something to them. The two foremost men have a thin, vertical white line stretching between one of his eyes and the head below. The area surrounding the heads is dark, and it is unclear if they are attached to bodies.[1][2] Michaël Borremans made The Pupils in 2001.[3]

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