19 March,2013 05:00 AM IST | | Agencies
The picture, which has been at Buckland Abbey in Devon, southwest England, since it was donated to the trust in 2010, was thought for decades to be a portrait by one of the Dutch master's pupils.
But the world's leading Rembrandt expert has now re-attributed it to the 17th-century master himself. It has been given a new value of £20 million (Rs 163 crore).
"These latest investigations are incredibly exciting and important," said David Taylor, the trust's curator of paintings and sculpture. "Conservation work and technical analysis being undertaken over the winter will give us further confirmation regarding the picture's authorship."
The self-portrait, dated 1635, shows the artist aged 29 wearing a cap with large white ostrich feathers.
The painting was donated to the National Trust by the widow of a property developer in her estate. The painting will hang at the 700-year-old abbey - which was formerly the home of explorer Francis Drake - for another eight months before being sent for cleaning and further examination.
When it first arrived at the abbey it was kept in storage for 18 months as there was nowhere to hang it, but it now becomes one of the National Trust's most important paintings.
"It's amazing to think we might've had an actual Rembrandt hanging here on the walls at Buckland Abbey for the past couple of years," said Jez McDermott, the abbey's property manager."Many of our visitors will have just passed by it, in what is sure to be a real contrast to the attention it is now going to receive."
The artist
Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn is regarded as one of the most prolific self portraitists. He has painted 40-50 pictures of himself u00a0