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Anthony van Dyck in Turin

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Anthony van Dyck paintings in Turin

Flemish · 1599–1641

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7 works across 1 institution

Turin's Galleria Sabauda holds 7 works 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.

Galleria Sabauda

💎 Hidden Gem

Turin · 7 works on display

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Equestrian portrait of Prince Tomaso of Savoy-Carignan

Equestrian portrait of Prince Tomaso of Savoy-Carignan

Galleria Sabauda

c. 1634

Portrait of Isabella Clara Eugenia as a nun

Portrait of Isabella Clara Eugenia as a nun

Galleria Sabauda

c. 1629

The three oldest children of Charles I Stuart (1600-1649) and Henrietta Maria de Bourbon (1609-1669), Charles (1630-1685), Mary (1631-1666) and James (1633-1685)

The three oldest children of Charles I Stuart (1600-1649) and Henrietta Maria de Bourbon (1609-1669), Charles (1630-1685), Mary (1631-1666) and James (1633-1685)

Galleria Sabauda

c. 1635

The Holy Family with Saints Elisabeth and John

The Holy Family with Saints Elisabeth and John

Galleria Sabauda

c. 1625

Saint Sebastian and the Angel

Saint Sebastian and the Angel

Galleria Sabauda

c. 1631

Madonna with the child

Madonna with the child

Galleria Sabauda

c. 1640

Family Portrait

c. 1620

Image rights reserved

Family Portrait

Galleria Sabauda

c. 1620

Planning your visit to Turin

Turin's major museums cluster around the historic centre — the Museo Egizio (one of the world's finest Egyptian collections) and the Galleria Sabauda are both central. The Torino+Piemonte Card covers most major museums and public transport for 2–5 days. The city is less crowded than Rome or Florence; queues are rarely a problem.

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