Artist: Anthony van Dyck (Flemish, 1599-1641)
Title: The Marriage of Saint Catherine
Medium: Antique engraving after the original by master engraver William Ridgway (British, 1830-1900).
Signature: Signed in the plate
Dimensions: Image Size 8 1/4 x 8 3/4 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 17 x 18 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
The Virgin seated under a rock, holding a wreath in her right hand and the Christ child on her knee with the left; he is holding the hand of St Catherine of Alexandria, kneeling at right, preparing to put a ring on her finger.
The seventh of twelve children born to a wealthy silk merchant in Belgium, Anthony van Dyck began to paint at an early age. By the age of nineteen, he had become a teacher in Antwerp. Soon afterward, he collaborated and trained with the famous Flemish painter Peter Paul Rubens. In his early twenties, van Dyck went to Italy, where he studied the paintings of Titian and Paolo Veronese and worked as a successful portrait painter for the Italian nobility. He became so well known that King Charles I of England summoned him to London to be his exclusive court painter and eventually gave him a knighthood. Van Dyck’s numerous portraits of Charles I and his family were greatly admired by his contemporaries. Realizing that Charles’s political and financial fortunes were in decline, van Dyck left England for Antwerp and Paris. A year later, after several unsuccessful projects abroad, he returned to London in ill health and died shortly thereafter. Van Dyck is buried in Saint Paul’s Cathedral, a distinction reserved only for illustrious British subjects.