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The Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele, 1434–1436.Oil on wood, 141 x 176.5 cm (including frame), 122 x 157 cm (excluding frame). Groeningemuseum, Bruges.. The Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele is a large oil-on-oak panel painting completed around 1434–1436 by the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck.
The Dresden Triptych (or Virgin and Child with St. Michael and St. Catherine and a Donor, or Triptych of the Virgin and Child) is a very small hinged-triptych altarpiece by the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck. It consists of five individual panel paintings: a central inner panel, and two double-sided wings.
English: Virgin and Child, with Saints and Donor (also known as the Madonna of Jan Vos) is an oil panel painting begun by the Early Netherlandish artist Jan van Eyck c. 1441 and completed by his workshop after his death in 1442. It was acquired in 1954 by the Frick museum, New York
Left to right: Saint Barbara, Jan Vos, Virgin and Child, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary. The Madonna of Jan Vos (also known as Virgin and Child, with Saints and Donor) is a small oil panel painting begun by the Early Netherlandish artist Jan van Eyck c. 1441 and finished by his workshop after his death in 1442. As he died during the period of its ...
The Virgin and Child Reading is an oil painting of uncertain date. It is a mid-to-late 15th century imitation of the work of the Early Netherlandish master Jan van Eyck, possibly after a now-lost original painting by him from 1433 - another copy of the same work is now in the Colegiata church in Covarrubias, Spain. [1]
The idea of a saint appearing before laity was common in Northern art of the period, [45] and is also represented in van Eyck's Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele (1434–1436). There, the Canon is portrayed as if having just momentarily paused to reflect on a passage from his hand-held bible as the Virgin and Child with two saints ...
Van Eyck was the first major European artist to utilize oil painting. ... Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele: 1436 Groeningemuseum, Bruges: 1.22 m x 1.57 m
Art historian Guy Bauman considers Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele (1434–36) by Jan van Eyck (1434–36) the most evocative and realistic of these. He writes van Eyck perfectly captures an "encounter [of] mortal and divine beings in another world". [13]