
Portrait of a Lady
1630
In this commanding oil on canvas from 1630, Anthony van Dyck presents an aristocratic female subject with the psychological penetration and luminous technique that cemented his reputation as the preeminent portraitist of seventeenth-century Europe. The sitter occupies the picture plane with quiet authority, her dark formal attire rendered in rich, layered blacks that absorb and reflect light in equal measure, while the pale luminosity of her hands and face draws the eye through a composition of studied elegance. Van Dyck's brushwork moves fluidly between passages of tight detail and loose, almost impressionistic handling, a virtuosity that would later influence Reynolds, Gainsborough, and generations of portrait painters who followed. At 140 by 107 centimetres, the canvas carries the physical presence of a work conceived for grand domestic interiors, and the sitter's composed gaze projects the kind of contained self-possession that Van Dyck reserved for subjects of genuine social standing. Painted during the artist's mature Antwerp period, just before his celebrated appointment as principal painter to the English court, the work reflects his complete command of the Flemish tradition while already gesturing toward the softer, more idealized manner he would develop in London. The attention given to textural contrast, between silk, lace, and skin, speaks to a painter at the height of his powers. Currently held within the distinguished collection of the Pinacoteca di Brera, this signed work represents a rare opportunity to acquire a fully autograph Van Dyck portrait from a pivotal year in his career. Signed portraits from this period, with clear institutional provenance, occupy the highest tier of the Old Master market, and the painting's excellent condition and monumental scale make it a centerpiece-quality acquisition for any serious collection focused on Baroque or Northern European painting.
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Overall
- Signed
- Yes
- Location
- Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan, Italy
- Spotted At
- Gallery · Pinacoteca di BreraView on map
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