Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Self-Portrait with a Sunflower is a self-portrait by Anthony van Dyck, a Flemish Baroque artist from Antwerp, then in the Spanish Netherlands. The oil on canvas painting is generally between 1632 and 1633. His successful ventures in the Spanish Netherlands and Italy propelled van Dyck into a career as court painter. [1]
Jupiter et Antiope (van Dyck) Portrait d'un homme âgé (van Dyck) La Reine Henriette Marie et son nain, Sir Jeffrey Hudson; Samson et Dalila (van Dyck) Portrait d'Isabella Brant; Triple portrait de Charles Ier; Portrait de la famille Lomellini; Les Cinq Enfants de Charles Ier; Le Couronnement d'épines (van Dyck)
Self-portrait (1613–14) 1613–1614 Academy of Fine Arts Vienna: Vienna AUT: Oil on canvas 25,8 × 19,5 cm Self-portrait (1617–18) 1617–1618 Alte Pinakothek: Munich DEU: Oil on canvas 82,5 × 70 cm Portrait of a Lady: ca. 1620 Legion of Honor Museum, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco: San Francisco USA: Oil on Canvas 148 x 109.2 cm
Pages in category "Self-portraits by Anthony van Dyck" ... Self-Portrait with a Sunflower This page was last edited on 11 November 2024, at 00:34 (UTC). ...
It was during the period van Dyck may have started painting the series of panels of Christ and the Apostles in bust-length, although it is also possible that this only happened after his first return from Italy in 1620–21. [6] [5] By the age of fifteen he was already a highly accomplished artist, as shown by his Self-portrait dated 1613–14. [7]
Self-portrait; Sir Anthony van Dyck: Artist: Anthony van Dyck Year: c. 1640: Medium: oil paint, canvas: Dimensions: 56.0 cm (22.0 in) × 46.0 cm (18.1 in) Location: National Portrait Gallery, United Kingdom : Owner: Alfred Bader, Philip Mould Collection: National Portrait Gallery, Johnny Van Haeften Gallery Identifiers: RKDimages ID: 122744
The self-portrait was probably painted by van Dyck during the winter of 1620–1621, which the artist spent in London.Van Dyck chose to portray himself as a country gentlemen dressed in fine clothes; he likely acquired these clothes due to his father being a wealthy clothier.
The Self-portrait of 1613–1614 is the first surviving self-portrait by the Flemish artist Anthony van Dyck, showing him aged about fifteen.At that date he was still working for Hendrick van Balen but was about to join Peter Paul Rubens's studio. [1]