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HANS HOLBEIN THE YOUNGER : A PIONEER IN REALISM

Cet article se compose de 19 pages.
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His trip to London had been quite fruitful and with the money he had earned there he managed to buy a house alongside the Rhine river in Basel where he also painted two murals in the town council building. Still, the political situation in Basel had not improved and Holbein decided once again to settle in London in 1531 where he worked during twelve years until he died victim of a plague epidemic that had swept the city during the fall of 1543.

During his long stay in London, Hans Holbein had become the favourite painter of King Henry 8th and his court. It was also during this 12-year period that he produced the most exquisite miniature portraits in a style that was only matched by a handful of miniaturists at the end of the 18th Century.


The Ambassadors

One of his greatest paintings, that art historians managed to almost fully apprehend only recently, was his striking portraits of The Ambassadors, now on permanent viewing in the London National Gallery. Such work reflected the incredible talent of
a painter who brought about a real revolution in painting in that sense that he entranced realism and somewhat was not far from approaching Surrealism with his anamorphosis of a skull placed at the feet of the ambassadors shown in full regalia.

Jakob Meier,
1516

Dorothee Kannengiesser,
Jacob Meier's wife, 1516

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