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Anthony van Dyck in Chicago

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Anthony van Dyck paintings in Chicago

Flemish · 1599–1641

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1 work across 1 institution

Chicago's Art Institute of Chicago holds 1 work by Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) — the city's entire known holding of this artist in a single institution.

Van Dyck transformed portrait painting and defined aristocratic self-presentation for a century. In person, his portraits have a psychological acuity that reproduction tends to reduce to mere elegance — the slight unease in a sitter's gaze, the way a hand is held.

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago · 1 work on display

The Art Institute of Chicago holds one of the world's finest collections of French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist painting, alongside major American art. Seurat's A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte and Grant Wood's American Gothic are among its most famous works.

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Portrait of Helena Tromper Du Bois

Portrait of Helena Tromper Du Bois

Art Institute of Chicago

c. 1631

ChicagoWikidata

Planning your visit to Chicago

The Art Institute of Chicago is at Millennium Park — take the Red or Green CTA line to Adams/Wabash. Allow at least three hours; the Impressionist collection alone warrants a full morning. Illinois residents receive free entry on select days.

Artwork data sourced from Wikidata. Coverage varies — always confirm with the museum before visiting.