Painter of the Bible

Circle of Jan van Eyck

Years1390–1441FromNetherlandishWorks1

Jan van Eyck is the founding figure of Northern Renaissance painting and one of the very few painters in any tradition whose technical innovations changed what oil paint could do for everyone after him.

Portrait of Circle of Jan van Eyck

Their faith

Why Circle of Jan van Eyck painted Christ

Jan van Eyck, a pivotal figure in the Northern Renaissance, lived a life deeply intertwined with his faith. Though specific details about his religious practices are sparse, his role as court painter to Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, suggests a man of significant standing within the Christian community of his time. His most renowned work, the Ghent Altarpiece, is a testament to his devotion, depicting the Adoration of the Mystic Lamb, an image that resonates with themes of sacrifice and redemption found in Revelation 5. The meticulous attention he paid to religious subjects indicates a reverence for scripture and a commitment to conveying spiritual truths through his art. Van Eyck's burial in the Church of Saint Donatian further underscores his connection to the faith community, suggesting that his artistic endeavors were not merely professional but also a form of worship.

Van Eyck's faith profoundly influenced his artistic vision, particularly in his religious panels. In works like the Madonna of Chancellor Rolin and the Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele, he captures divine grace through exquisite detail and vibrant color, inviting viewers into a sacred experience. His ability to render the ethereal beauty of the Virgin Mary and the Christ Child reflects a deep spiritual understanding and reverence for the holy figures he portrayed. The Ghent Altarpiece, with its intricate layers and profound symbolism, serves as a visual hymn, drawing the faithful into contemplation of Christ's sacrifice. Through his art, Jan van Eyck continues to inspire and edify, reminding us of the beauty and depth of faith that can be expressed through creativity.

Life & work

Jan van Eyck is the founding figure of Northern Renaissance painting and one of the very few painters in any tradition whose technical innovations changed what oil paint could do for everyone after him. Born around 1390, possibly in Maaseik in the Prince-Bishopric of Liège, he served as court painter and trusted diplomatic agent to Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, from 1425 onward, was sent on a 1428 embassy to Lisbon to paint the portrait of Philip's prospective bride Isabella of Portugal, and settled in Bruges by 1430, where he spent the rest of his life.

The work that fixed his reputation in his own century and ours is the Ghent Altarpiece — twelve panels arranged in two registers, opened on feast days to reveal the Adoration of the Mystic Lamb on the lower interior. He completed it in 1432 in collaboration with his older brother Hubert, who had begun the commission and died before its completion. The lower central panel — saints, prophets, virgins, and martyrs gathered in a meadow around an altar where the Lamb stands bleeding into a chalice, the Holy Spirit hovering above as a dove — gives Revelation 5 its most enduring single image. The work has been stolen, hidden, recovered, and restored more times than almost any other panel painting in the West; the long-running technical study of its layered glaze structure has shaped our understanding of fifteenth-century oil painting.

His independent religious panels are smaller in scale and exact in finish. The Madonna of Chancellor Rolin (Louvre, c. 1435), the Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele (Bruges, 1436), the Lucca Madonna (Frankfurt), the Annunciation now in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, and the small diptychs of the Crucifixion and Last Judgment in the Metropolitan Museum carry the same impossibly precise brushwork — every brocade, jewel, hair, and reflection painted with magnifying-glass attention.

He also painted the great civilian Arnolfini Portrait (1434, National Gallery, London), and a small body of court portraits including the so-called Man in a Red Turban (1433, possibly a self-portrait). He died in Bruges in 1441 and was buried in the Church of Saint Donatian.

Notable works in detail

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The Crucifixion and the Last Judgment, painted by Jan van Eyck around 1436 in oil on canvas transferred from wood and now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, is a small early-Eyckian diptych that survives as one of the principal Jan van Eyck works in any American collection. The left panel shows the Crucifixion at the moment immediately after Christ's death — the swooning Virgin in the arms of John, the Magdalene clinging to the foot of the cross, the centurion on horseback in the foreground recognizing the divinity of the dying Christ — set against a panoramic landscape of the city of Jerusalem fading into snow-capped mountains. The right panel shows the Last Judgment in three vertical registers: Christ enthroned in judgment at the top, the resurrected dead emerging from the earth and sea in the middle, and a multi-tiered hell of damned souls and devils in the bottom. The painting is the principal Jan van Eyck religious work in the Metropolitan and a defining example of the Early Netherlandish oil-on-panel technique that the Eyckian workshop perfected in the 1430s.

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The Virgin and Child in a Niche, painted by Jan van Eyck around 1440 in oil on a small wooden panel and now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, is among the surviving small-format Eyckian devotional paintings of the late 1430s and early 1440s. The Virgin stands in a stone architectural niche with the Christ Child upright on her right arm; the niche is carved with small grotesque figures and topped by a small architectural canopy; the Virgin's blue mantle pools down onto a stone parapet at the bottom of the panel. The composition follows the Eyckian convention of placing the Madonna in a sculptural niche to underscore the stone-like permanence of the Marian devotional image — a visual conceit Jan van Eyck developed in several of the small surviving panels of the late 1430s and early 1440s. The painting is one of the principal small Jan van Eyck Madonnas in any American collection.

Bible scenes Circle of Jan van Eyck painted

All works by Circle of Jan van Eyck in our library

Frequently asked questions

What was Jan van Eyck's faith?
Jan van Eyck was a devout Christian, and his faith is reflected in the religious themes and subjects of his artwork. His most famous piece, the Ghent Altarpiece, showcases his deep reverence for scripture and the divine.
Why did Jan van Eyck paint scenes from the Bible?
Van Eyck painted biblical scenes as a way to express his faith and convey spiritual truths. His works, such as the Madonna of Chancellor Rolin, depict sacred moments that invite viewers to reflect on their own spirituality.
What inspired Jan van Eyck's religious art?
Jan van Eyck's religious art was inspired by his devotion to Christianity and his desire to depict the beauty of divine subjects. His meticulous attention to detail and use of vibrant colors served to elevate the spiritual significance of his paintings.
How did Jan van Eyck's faith shape his painting?
Van Eyck's faith shaped his painting by guiding his choice of subjects and influencing his artistic techniques. His works often reflect themes of redemption and grace, as seen in the intricate symbolism of the Ghent Altarpiece.
What is Jan van Eyck best known for in Christian art?
Jan van Eyck is best known for the Ghent Altarpiece, which features the Adoration of the Mystic Lamb, and for his detailed religious panels like the Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele. His art remains a profound expression of Christian devotion.

Further reading