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. Self-portraiture was a typical artform in the Northern Renaissance and had already been used by Rubens and Jan van Eyck.

See also

  • List of paintings by Anthony van Dyck

References

Bibliography

  • Gian Pietro Bellori, Vite de' pittori, scultori e architecti moderni, Torino, Einaudi, 1976.
  • Didier Bodart, Van Dyck, Prato, Giunti, 1997.
  • Justus Müller Hofstede, Van Dyck, Milan, Rizzoli/Skira, 2004.
  • Stefano Zuffi, Il Barocco, Verona, Mondadori, 2004.
  • Marco Horak, Van Dyck tra i grandi ritrattisti nelle raccolte piacentine, in "Panorama Musei", anno XVI, no. 2, August 2011

External links

  • Media related to Self-Portrait (Anthony van Dyck - Academy of Fine Arts Vienna) at Wikimedia Commons

KDS Photo, Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery, detail of oil painting by

Anthony van Dyck Art, Biography & Art for Sale Sotheby’s

Van Dyck, selfportrait galleryIntell

Van Dyck’s 'Portrait of a Man' in Vienna Identified as Dutch Golden Age

Van Dyck. Autoportrait Stock Photo Alamy