About this artwork
As a young artist, Van Dyck spent six years in Italy, from 1621 to 1627. He was based in the rich port of Genoa, where he painted sumptuous portraits of the local nobility. This is Van Dyck’s grandest and most ambitious portrait of the period, painted for the Lomellini family. Giacomo Lomellini was Doge of Genoa (head of the city’s government) from 1625-27. He does not appear here, because portraits of the doge in office were forbidden to prevent personal promotion. Giacomo’s two eldest sons are shown standing next to his second wife and their two children. It is a magnificent image of family pride and prestige and anticipates Van Dyck’s royal family portraits for Charles I.
Updated before 2020
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artist:
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title:The Lomellini Family
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date created:About 1625 - 1627
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materials:Oil on canvas
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measurements:269.00 x 254.00 cm; Framed: 294.30 x 279.20 x 11.50 cm / 108.00 kg
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased by the Royal Institution 1830; transferred to the National Gallery 1859
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accession number:NG 120
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gallery:
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depicted:
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subject:
Sir Anthony van Dyck
Sir Anthony van Dyck
Van Dyck is perhaps most famous for the grand and elegant portraits he painted of the British aristocracy when he was court painter to King Charles I. He trained in Antwerp, and worked in Rubens’s studio as an assistant. His outstanding talents were recognised and encouraged by Rubens, who...