'', a
triptych –1450.
Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp Relatively few works are attributed to van der Weyden's relatively long career, but this does not mean he was un-prolific, more that it is likely that many have been lost. Nonetheless, he had a very well defined style, and the majority of the attributions are generally accepted. Van der Weyden left no self-portraits. However it has been suggested that he painted a self-portrait into one of the Justice panels, which was subsequently copied into the Bern tapestry. A drawing with the inscription "''Recueil d'Arras''" is also said to depict Van der Weyden. Many of his most important works were destroyed during the late 17th century. He is first mentioned in historical records in 1427 when, relatively late in life, he studied painting under Campin during 1427–32, and soon outshone his master and, later, even influenced him. After his apprenticeship, he was made
master of the
Tournai Guild of St Luke. He moved to Brussels in 1435, where he quickly established his reputation for his technical skill and emotional use of line and colour. He completed his
Deposition in 1435, which as he had deliberately intended, made him one of the most sought after and influential artists in northern Europe and is still considered his masterpiece. The fragment of the London
National Gallery's
The Magdalen Reading has been described by Campbell as "one of the great masterpieces of fifteenth-century art and among Rogier's most important early works". Since the 1970s, this painting has been linked to two small heads in the collection of the
Calouste Gulbenkian Museum (Lisbon), of Saint Catherine and of St Joseph. It is now widely believed that these three fragments came from the same large altarpiece depicting the "Virgin and Child with Saints", partly recorded in a later drawing now in
Stockholm. At some unknown date before 1811, this altarpiece was carved up into these three fragments. '', .
Philadelphia Museum of Art The lost
The Justice of Trajan and Herkinbald, which survived until the end of the 17th century, consisted of four large panels representing the
Justice of Trajan and
Justice of Herkenbald. These were commissioned by the City of Brussels for the
Gulden Camere (Golden Chamber) of the
Brussels Town Hall. The first and third panels were signed, and the first dated 1439. All four were finished before 1450. They were destroyed in the French
Bombardment of Brussels in 1695, but are known from many surviving descriptions, from a free partial copy in tapestry (
Bern Historical Museum) and from other free and partial copies in drawing and painting. The paintings probably measured about 4.5 m each, which was an enormous scale for a painting on panel at that time. They served as 'examples of justice' for the aldermen of the city who had to speak justice in this room. The paintings were praised or described by a series of commentators until their destruction, including
Dürer (1520),
Vasari (1568),
Molanus (–1580), and
Baldinucci (1688). In his commissioned portraits, van der Weyden typically flattered his sitters. He often idealised or softened their facial features, allowing them a handsomeness or beauty, or interest or intelligence they might not have been blessed with in life. He often enlarged the eyes, better defined the contours of the face, and gave a much stronger jaw than the subject may have possessed in life. Among his most celebrated portraits are those of
Philip the Good, his third wife
Isabella of Portugal and their son
Charles the Bold. ==Influence==