Jan van Eyck
The Arnolfini Portrait
A scholarly catalog of the most consequential dog paintings in Western art, drawn from museum and major private collections — from Velázquez's mastiff to Bonnard's terraces — with editorial commentary on each work and notes on where to find good reproductions.
Part of the Pet Pic Portraits library of art references. Affiliate links are disclosed throughout.
Ten paintings that anchor the canon — the ones art-historical surveys return to, and the works most often reproduced as prints. Listed roughly in chronological order.
The Arnolfini Portrait
Las Meninas
The Painter and His Pug
A Couple of Foxhounds
The Dog
Dignity and Impudence
King Charles Spaniel
Madame Charpentier and Her Children
The Totteridge XI
The Terrasse Family (L'Après-midi bourgeois)
The full catalog continues with twenty further entries.
View the full catalog →"The dog has been in the painter's studio almost as long as the painter has. To trace its appearance across six centuries of Western art is to trace, in miniature, a history of what we have wanted painting to do."
— From the curator's introduction1400 — 1700
The dog enters the picture as a symbol of fidelity and a marker of nobility, attentive at the edges of grand allegory and at the feet of royal sitters.
1700 — 1800
The age of the sporting portrait. Stubbs gives the hunting dog the same anatomical seriousness he gives the racehorse; Reynolds and Hogarth bring the parlor pet to studio scale.
1800 — 1900
The century in which the dog moves from the margins of the canvas to its center. Landseer's sentimental portraiture defines a whole school; Goya and Manet pull the subject toward modern feeling.
1860 — 1929
Painters take the dog as a question of form rather than allegory. The breed portraitists Wardle and Earl raise show-dog likeness to studio standard; the post-Impressionists fold the pet into domestic interiors and modern color.
A short list of prints and reproduction sources we return to when researching this catalog. Stock and pricing vary; links are affiliate. The mockups below represent a typical framed-print presentation; the retailer page is the source of truth on size and finish.
Framed reproduction
See all sources →Framed reproduction
See all sources →Framed reproduction
See all sources →Framed reproduction
See all sources →This site is a working catalog rather than a museum. We restrict ourselves to paintings (no sculpture, no photography) in which the dog is meaningfully present — sometimes as the sole subject, sometimes as a structural figure in a larger composition. Each entry includes the artist, title, year, medium and collection of record, together with a short editorial note.
Where a reproduction is widely available we link to the better print sources. Where it is not, we say so. Affiliate links throughout; see methodology for selection criteria.
A sister project to this catalog. AI-rendered portraits in named historical styles — reviewed and approved by our team before delivery.
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