Jan Carel van Eyck or Jan Karel van Eyck, was a Flemish painter active in Antwerp and Italy in the second half of the 17th century. He is known for his landscapes with villages and city scapes with genre scenes. He is also mentioned as a painter of portraits and biblical scenes.
Life
Jan Carel van Eyck was born in Antwerp as the son of the painter Jan Carel van Eyck and Dymphna Heyman. He was baptized on 12 May 1649. He had another brother called Nicolaas who became a painter but of whom no known works are known. His uncle Gaspar was a marine painter. Jan Carel's family was well-off and lived at a prestigious address on the Meir in Antwerp. His father became a captain of a local schutterij in 1658. He was registered at Antwerp's Guild of Saint Luke as a pupil of the history painterJan Erasmus Quellinus under whom he started to study in 1669. There is no record that he became a master of the Guild. He travelled to Italy and his presence in Rome in 1677 is recorded. On a winter landscape noted in 1907 the signature reads 'Roma', which is further evidence that he resided in Rome. His trace was lost in Italy and he is believed never to have returned to Antwerp. It is not clear when or where he died. It must have been after 1686 or 1692. His death dues were never paid at the Antwerp Guild.
Work
Jan Carel van Eyck is known for his landscapes with villages and cityscapes with genre scenes. He is also mentioned as a painter of portraits and biblical scenes. In the second half of the 17th century city views had become popular. Antwerp painters such as Erasmus de Bie specialised in the genre of city views showing genre scenes with many figures on the frozen Scheldt as in the :File:Erasmus de Bie - Figures in front of the frozen Scheldt in Antwerp.jpg|Figures in front of the frozen Scheldt in Antwerp or public events such as :File:Cassel de bie procession.JPG|The Ommegang in Antwerp. These animated scenes, particularly those of city squares populated with many characters, on foot or on horseback, were likely an inspiration for van Eyck. An example of an animated city view by van Eyck is the :File:Jan Carel van Eyck - Townscape in winter with carriages.jpg|Townscape in winter with carriages. It shows a large city view in winter with many figures, horses and carriages bustling about on a frozen river lined by town houses and a church. Some ships have been frozen in by the river. In the foreground is a carriage drawn by six horses which startles a horse ridden by a man. There are many figures engaged in conversations, fishing, sleighing or observing other passers-by. While the town architecture is clearly that of a 17th-century Flemish town, the persons in the scene appear to be wearing southern European and some even Oriental clothes, and some women appear to be wearing masks. In spite of the intensive activity, van Eyck achieves a balance by covering the busy street with snow, thereby adding a touch of calmness and an almost wistful atmosphere to the bustling scene. The Prado attributes a work in its collection depicting the :File:La caída de Faetón.jpg|Fall of Phaeton to van Eyck. This is a painting from the series of paintings inspired by Ovid's Metamorphoses made by various Antwerp artists after designs by Peter Paul Rubens for the King of Spain's hunting lodge. It is clear that this work cannot have been painted by Jan Carel van Eyck since he was not even born when this series of paintings was executed in the mid 1630s. At the Netherlands Institute for Art History site the painting is attributed to an anonymous painter.