
Anthony van Dyck
1599–1641 · Spanish Netherlands · Baroque painting
The story
In 1632 Charles I of England, a king obsessed with the appearance of an authority he did not quite have in Parliament, brought the Antwerp painter Anthony van Dyck to London, knighted him, and gave him rooms at Blackfriars and a boat to ferry him up the Thames to the royal palace. Van Dyck had trained years earlier in the studio of Peter Paul Rubens, the leading painter of the Southern Netherlands, and had spent much of his twenties in Italy studying Titian's portraits in Genoa. What he brought back to England was a way of painting the aristocracy that made formal portraiture look relaxed, even intimate, without losing an ounce of grandeur.
For the rest of the decade van Dyck painted almost nobody but the king, the queen, and their circle, turning out image after image of a monarchy that recorded itself, in paint, exactly as it wanted to be remembered. Charles hardly sat for anyone else again. Those portraits are still the picture most people carry of the Stuart court, elongated hands, silk, ease, a king who looks entirely secure on his throne.
Van Dyck died in London in December 1641, a year before civil war broke out between Charles and Parliament. Charles was executed outside his own Banqueting House in Whitehall in 1649, reportedly wearing two shirts against the January cold so that he would not shiver and be seen to be afraid.
Works
88 works
Luigia Cattaneo-GentileAnthony van Dyck, 1622
Madonna and ChildAnthony van Dyck, 1621
Magistrates of BrusselsAnthony van Dyck, 1634
Portrait of Charles I and Queen Henrietta MariaAnthony van Dyck, 1632
Portrait of Cornelis van der GeestAnthony van Dyck, 1619
Portrait of Francisco de Moncada, Marqués de AytonaAnthony van Dyck, 1634
Portrait of Marchesa Geronima SpinolaAnthony van Dyck, 1625
Portrait of Marie de' MediciAnthony van Dyck, 1631
Portrait of Mary Hill, Lady KilligrewAnthony van Dyck, 1638
Portrait of Sir William KilligrewAnthony van Dyck, 1638
Portrait of the Marchesa Elena Grimaldi CattaneoAnthony van Dyck, 1623
Saint RosaliaAnthony van Dyck, 1625
Saint RosaliaAnthony van Dyck, 1624
Self-portraitAnthony van Dyck, 1617
The Betrayal of ChristAnthony van Dyck, 1620
The Betrayal of ChristAnthony van Dyck, 1620
The Painter Martin RyckaertAnthony van Dyck, 1631
Vertumnus and PomonaAnthony van Dyck, 1625
Charles I (1600-1649)Anthony van Dyck, 1636
Charles I and Henrietta Maria with their two eldest children, Prince Charles and Princess MaryAnthony van Dyck, 1632
Christ of the CoinAnthony van Dyck, 1625
DepositionAnthony van Dyck, 1618
Diego Felipe de Guzmán, Marquis of LeganésAnthony van Dyck, 1634
Emmanuel Philibert of Savoy, Prince of OnegliaAnthony van Dyck, 1624
Lady Elizabeth Thimbelby and her SisterAnthony van Dyck, 1637