His earliest works follow his master Wolffort's style, which was itself indebted to the academic manner of
Otto van Veen. During his stay in Rome he made many studies after the antique and developed an interest in
classicism, which remained a constant characteristic of his style. At the same time, he tried his hand at the Bamboccianti genre style of painting. In response to the contemporary demand for copies of Rubens' oil sketches, van Lint produced a large number of copies of Rubens' work. Pieter van Lint was together with
Abraham Willemsens and
Willem van Herp one of the principal producers of such copies for the Antwerp art dealers. Many of these were executed on copper, a material for painting that was highly prized both for durability and its glossy finish in Spain. Four oils on copper works by van Lint are in the collection of the
Prado Museum in Madrid, including a copy after Rubens. An album with travel sketches, including two sketches which are signed 'P.V.L.' in the collection of the
Martin von Wagner Museum in
Würzburg, which were formerly attributed to
Pieter van Laer (the central figure of the Bamboccianti) has now been re-attributed to Pieter van Lint. The album contains sketches, which the artist made of scenes, including of his fellow travelers, during his travels in Italy around 1636. The drawings give a lively idea of the conditions and the manner in which travelers undertook their travels at the time. Pieter van Lint was also active as a designer of tapestries. Correspondence between the Antwerp trader Hendrik Lenaerts and the
Brussels weavers Jan van Leefdael and Gerard van der Strecken dated 1660 shows that van Lint had designed 8 cartoons for a
Story of Domitian. A tapestry series dated 1639 on the
Story of the Virgin Mary still preserved in the Pottery convent in
Bruges is believed to have been made after models by Pieter van Lint. ==References==