Antoon van Dyck, a Flemish painter trained in the workshop of Pieter Paul Rubens, painted this canvas during his long stay in Italy, when he moved from Venice to Mantua to stay at the Gonzaga court. The lesson of the master Rubens is still present in this masterpiece, the work of a now mature and fully established artist, evident above all in the rendering of the figures and their complexions. The sober brushwork and the attention to the modulation of light effects, however, stand out as distinctive features of Van Dyck's language, influenced by Venetian painting and in particular by Titian.
The subject of the painting is easily recognisable: the sleeping child symbolizes childhood, while maturity and youth are represented by a vigorous armed man and a young woman who turns to him offering roses with a seductive gesture; the bent, white-haired man behind them is instead a symbol of old age.
The work is constructed according to an elliptical motion that from the whiteness of the child's body, abandoned in sleep, continues along the woman's arm up to her face. An intense and trembling gaze unites the two young people, while the man, with a confident gesture, touches his beloved's arm. The old man in the distance, pointing his finger downwards towards the child, seems to ideally close the path. This circular progression wants to express man's abandonment to the inexorable passage of time.
Title: The ages of man
Author: Antoon van Dyck
Date: 1625 - 27
Technique: Oil painting on canvas
Displayed in: Palladian Basilica
In the Exhibition: Caravaggio, Van Dyck, Sassolino
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