Portrait of a Young Woman (van der Weyden)

Portrait of a Young Woman
Artist Rogier van der Weyden
Year Circa 1440–1445 [1]
Type Drawing, silverpoint on ivory-coloured prepared paper
Dimensions 16.7 cm × 11.7 cm (6.6 in × 4.6 in)
Location British Museum
Accession PD 1874-8-8-2266
Website Museum page

Portrait of a Young Woman is a drawing by the Flemish artist Rogier van der Weyden. It depicts a young woman wearing a headscarf pinned to her hair and has been variously dated as c. 1430s and c. 1440 - 1445.[1] The identity of the woman has not been established, nor her social class. The drawing is presumably a study for a painted portrait now lost, but likely to have been similar to the Portrait of a Woman in Berlin.[2]

Description

The drawing is worked in silverpoint on ivory-coloured prepared paper. On the reverse is a 17th-century (or possibly earlier) inscription "Ruggero di Bruselle/1460" (i.e. "Roger of Brussels 1460"), which suggests it was already connected with van der Weyden from an early date. The workmanship is of top quality, the modelling subtly worked to suggest a three-dimensional sculptural effect.[3]

The sitter is presented in three-quarter view and appears lively and direct. Her clothing gives no real clue about her status. Campbell and van der Stock remark that on the one hand the relatively flat cap suggests a middle-class background, while on the other hand the fur-lined collar suggests the upper-class.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 Campbell & Van der Stock, p. 336
  2. Campbell (2004) p. 56
  3. 1 2 Campbell & Van der Stock, p. 335-6

Bibliography



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