Virgin and Child
Anthony van Dyck, ca. 1620
About this artwork
In the early Baroque masterpiece *Virgin and Child* (ca. 1620), Anthony van Dyck captures a deeply intimate moment between the Virgin Mary and the infant Christ. Painted in oil on wood—a favored medium for portable devotional panels—this compact work (25¼ × 19½ in.) glows with the artist's signature luminosity and tender realism. The tags hint at a nursing Madonna, a motif emphasizing Mary's humanity and maternal love, which resonated in Counter-Reformation Europe as a way to draw worshippers closer to the divine. Van Dyck, a prodigious Flemish painter and protégé of Peter Paul Rubens, was in his early twenties when he created this piece in Antwerp. His Baroque style shines through in the soft, radiant flesh tones, dynamic drapery, and emotional warmth, blending Rubens's dramatic vigor with van Dyck's emerging elegance. Such images were cherished in private homes and chapels, fostering personal piety amid religious upheavals. Acquired by The Metropolitan Museum of Art through the Fletcher Fund in 1951, this painting exemplifies van Dyck's early mastery and the enduring appeal of Madonna and Child iconography. Visitors, pause to admire how its gentle gaze invites quiet reflection on faith and motherhood.