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Saint Rosalia Crowned by Angels (Houston)

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Saint Rosalia Crowned by Angels is a c.1625 oil on canvas painting by Anthony van Dyck, one of five surviving works showing the saint which he produced whilst he was quarantined in Palermo, Sicily due to a plague[1]. It is now in the Menil Collection in Houston, Texas, which bought it in 1968[2]. It was loaned from there in 2011-2012 to the Dulwich Picture Gallery in London[3].

It shows the influence of Pietro Novelli, then also in the city[4], whilst its composition is very similar to two other 1624 works, one now in the Wellington Collection at Apsley House in London[5][6] and the other still in Palermo.

References

  1. ^ Ruth Hazard (19 December 2011). "Saint Rosalia paintings by Sir Anthony van Dyck to be reunited at Dulwich Picture Gallery". Culture24. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  2. ^ Salomon, Xavier F. (2012). Van Dyck in Sicily 1624-1625 : Painting and the Plague. Milan: Silvana Editoriale Spa. p. 98-101. ISBN 8836621724.
  3. ^ "Art after death: Van Dyck's Painting and the Plague – in pictures". Guardian. 15 February 2012. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  4. ^ "Santa Rosalia Incoronata dagli Angeli" (in Italian). arte.it.
  5. ^ "Saint Rosalie Crowned with Roses by Two Angels". ArtUK.
  6. ^ Sterling, Charles (1939). "'Van Dyck's Paintings of St. Rosalie'". Vol. 74, no. 431. Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs. pp. 52-55 and 58-63. JSTOR 867652.