אמן: Anthony Van Dyck
תַאֲרִיך: 1624
גודל: 100 x 74 cm
מוּזֵיאוֹן: The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, United States Of America)
טֶכנִיקָה: Oil On Canvas
Van Dyck was in Palermo, Sicily, when a plague broke out and the city was quarantined. In their despair, residents prayed to the city’s twelfth-century patroness, Saint Rosalie, whose long-lost remains were rediscovered in the midst of the epidemic. Images of Saint Rosalie were in great demand; this one was painted by Van Dyck on top of a self-portrait that he had sketched on the canvas. Acquired in 1871, this was one of the first European paintings to enter The Met collection.
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