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HANS HOLBEIN THE YOUNGER : A PIONEER IN REALISM

Cet article se compose de 19 pages.
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Georg Gisze, 1532

Holbein painted in 1532 the portrait of a German merchant called Georg Gisze, now in the Berlin museum, which was remarkable regarding the multiplicity of accessories placed around the sitter, notably the still life on the table and the deceptive effect on the wall.

In 1533, he painted the double portrait of Jean de Dinteville and Georges de Selve, called "The Ambassadors", one of his most achieved works with many objects placed in that painting, the sumptuous rendering of clothes and the presence of the strange anamorphosis of a skull, a painting full of innuendoes that has yet to deliver all its meaning today.

Holbein then produced in 1534 the portrait of Thomas Cromwell, a painting which was to have some considerable influence on his destiny since it was Cromwell who reportedly made him known to the king though, according to certain accounts, the painter was introduced by Thomas Morus to the monarch. Still, it was only in 1536 that Holbein became one of the King's official painters. That year he painted the portrait of Sir Richard Southwell, now in Florence while he produced the celebrated portrait of King Henry and his father a year later, a major work which was destroyed in the fire that devastated White Hall in 1698 and of which a carton is now in Harwick hall. He also painted the portrait of Jane Seymour and that of Lady Vaux (in Prague) as well of that of Charles Solier de la Morette.


Portrait of Charles Solier de la Morette

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