In Antwerp, around 1600, a new type of painting was created with the motif of a garland or wreath of flowers and fruit with an illusory relief, portrait or symbolic motif in the central part. Jan Philip van Thielen, a Flemish painter of the Baroque period and Daniel Seghers' disciple, masterfully represented this type of composition. He collaborated with the painter of figural scenes Erasmus Quellinus the Younger, to whom he was related. The Portrait of a Girl in a Garland of Flowers from the Lublin collection is most probably the result of the joint work of those two artists. There is no doubt about van Thielen's authorship since the author's signature has been preserved on the face at the bottom of the painting. Over the years, the artist changed the way he signed his works, which enabled establishing the painting's creation as 1650-1660. The composition of the portrait is free. Strong chiaroscuro builds the form. The artist emphasised the natural beauty and grace of a few-years-old child. These features of the painting would indicate the hand of Quellinus the Younger. The girl is slightly leaning out of the dark space, with the painted outline of a carved stone cartouche-gate, her antic dress, unnatural solemnity, and the symbolism of briefly blooming, multi-coloured flowers surrounding her indicate that this is a portrait of the deceased. The transience and shortness of life are symbolised by flowers depicted with great precision and botanical accuracy. The artist selected plants for their beauty, originality, exoticism and symbolic meaning. The flower species depicted by van Thielen bloom from spring to autumn, i.e., at different times. Only the paradisiacal land can be the place where they meet out of time.
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