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HANS HOLBEIN THE YOUNGER : A PIONEER IN REALISM

Cet article se compose de 19 pages.
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A year earlier, he had been in close touch with Jan Froben, a printer for whom he produced decorative drawings. Holbein also was in contact with Erasmus as soon as 1515 and such relationship rapidly induced his success.

In 1516, Holbein was already dealings with many orders regarding religious paintings and portraits produced in Basel and other cities such as Lucerne the following year.

In 1519, he joined a corporation of Basel painters, glass makers, saddle makers and tailors called “To the Sky” and became a bourgeois of that city on July 3rd 1520 after marrying a widow, already mother of a boy. This woman, according to many biographers was cantankerous and wicked, a fact that did not seem much purported if one considers the expressive portrait he made of her in 1528.

The portraits of Erasmus he produced in 1523 underlined the persistence of his relationship with that famous man while many printers continued to call on him to illustrate their books and patrons knocked at his door to ask him to decorate their houses. He had also orders from Zurich and Bern visited France, most probably the town of Bourges, in 1524.

Basel then started to be marred by religious and social troubles when Lutheran ideas spread in the city provoking disputes. Reformers, Catholics and Liberals quarrelled violently and Holbein had no longer orders from the Church or from many people who were then involved in these religious feuds.

A peasant uprising in 1525 further added fuel to the instability faced by Basel and many Swiss or German cities. As a result the Basel University was emptied and most printers became out of work. A year later the town faced a severe economic crisis and an epidemic of plague.

Many painters lived in dire conditions and Holbein had to find an urgent solution to eke out a living. Thanks to Erasmus, who was in close contact with Thomas Morus, he decided to go to England during the fall of 1526, leaving behind him his wife and children.

But first of all he went to Antwerp with the desire to meet Quentin Metsys whom he much admired.

On his arrival in London Holbein discovered a bustling and joyful city which had not yet been exposed to religious troubles. In addition, he did not feel much removed from his former element, as there was a strong community of Dutch and German merchants living there.

England seemed so far from the continent and from the wrong ideas the Continentals had nurtured vis-à-vis the English people. In fact, the country enjoyed some tremendous wealth while the English court seemed to lead a rollicking life. In his eyes nothing seemed more sumptuous than the costumes worn by members of the English nobility or the houses they possessed.

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