Flemish painter, who was one of the most
important and prolific portraitists of the 17th century and one of the
most brilliant colorists in the history of art.
Van Dyck was born on March 22, 1599, in Antwerp, son
of a rich silk merchant, and his precocious artistic talent was already
obvious at age 11, when he was apprenticed to the Flemish historical
painter Hendrik van Balen. He was admitted to the Antwerp guild of painters
in 1618, before his 19th birthday. He spent the next two years as a
member of the workshop of the Flemish painter Peter Paul Rubens in Antwerp.
Van Dyck's work during this period is in the lush, exuberant style of
Rubens, and several paintings attributed to Rubens have since been ascribed
to van Dyck.
From 1620 to 1627 van Dyck traveled in Italy, where
he was in great demand as a portraitist and where he developed his maturing
style. He toned down the Flemish robustness of his early work to concentrate
on a more dignified, elegant manner. In his portraits of Italian aristocrats—men
on prancing horses, ladies in black gowns—he created idealized figures
with proud, erect stances, slender figures, and the famous expressive
"van Dyck" hands. Influenced by the great Venetian painters Titian,
Paolo Veronese, and Giovanni Bellini, he adopted colors of great richness
and jewel-like purity. No other painter of the age surpassed van Dyck
at portraying the shimmering whites of satin, the smooth blues of silk,
or the rich crimsons of velvet. He was the quintessential painter of
aristocracy, and was particularly successful in Genoa. There he showed
himself capable of creating brilliantly accurate likenesses of his subjects,
while he also developed a repertoire of portrait types that served him
well in his later work at the court of Charles I of England.
Back in Antwerp from 1627 to 1632, van Dyck worked
as a portraitist and a painter of church pictures. In 1632 he settled
in London as chief court painter to King Charles I, who knighted him
shortly after his arrival. Van Dyck painted most of the English aristocracy
of the time, and his style became lighter and more luminous, with thinner
paint and more sparkling highlights in gold and silver. At the same
time, his portraits occasionally showed a certain hastiness or superficiality
as he hurried to satisfy his flood of commissions. In 1635 van Dyck
painted his masterpiece, Charles I in Hunting Dress (Louvre, Paris),
a standing figure emphasizing the haughty grace of the monarch.
Van Dyck was one of the most influential 17th-century
painters. He set a new style for Flemish art and founded the English
school of painting; the portraitists Sir Joshua Reynolds and Thomas
Gainsborough of that school were his artistic heirs. He died in London
on December 9, 1641. |