Jan van Eyck. Man in a Red Turban. 1433. Oil on panel. The National Gallery, London, UK.

Jan van Eyck is considered to be a founder of the Early Renaissance style in the Northern Renaissance. We do not know the exact date and place of his birth, it is believed that he was born in early 1390s in the eastern province of the Netherlands Limburg. He probably was taught the art by his brother Hubert van Eyck, with whom he created the masterpiece The Ghent Altarpiece (1425-1432), which they started in 1425, but after the death of Hubert, his younger brother finished it alone.
Until 1425
Jan van Eyck served at the court of Duke Johann of Bavaria in Hague, painting
and restoring pictures. Since 1425 he served at the court of Philip the Good of
Burgundy, where he was greatly valued not only as an artist, but he also was
entrusted by Duke with various diplomatic missions. Since 1430 van Eyck lived
and worked in Bruges as painter to the court and city. It was believed, that Jan
van Eyck invented painting with oils, maybe it is not true, but his technique in
painting with oils is exceptional. His paint is so transparent that his works
have a unique, almost luminous sheen. In The Virgin of the Chancellor
Rolin (1434-1436) Van Eyck revealed himself as a master in
representation of space. Van Eyck was one of the first great masters of portrait
painting in Europe. His best portraits are Portrait of Cardinal Nicola
Albergati (c.1432), Portrait of a Young Man
(1432), Man in a Red
Turban (1433), which is probably a self-portrait, Portrait of Margaret van
Eyck, Artist's Wife(?) (1439) and also one of the masterpieces of
the Western world Giovanni
Arnolfini and His Wife Giovanna Cenami (The Arnolfini Marriage) (1434).
Among his other best works are Madonna from the Inn's Hall
(1433), The Lucca
Madonna (1436), The Madonna of Canon van der
Paele (1436), The Virgin and Child in a
Church (central section of a portable altar) (1437), The Virgin and Child
with Saints and Donor (1441). Jan van Eyck died in 1441 in Bruges.