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HANS HOLBEIN THE YOUNGER : A PIONEER IN REALISM

Cet article se compose de 19 pages.
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In addition, the City of Basel was allowing Holbein to work two additional years for the King of England before such contract would become effective while an annual pension would be paid to his wife.

Holbein returned to London at the end of 1538 and offered the King a portrait of his son the Prince of Wales. In the meantime he probably passed through Paris to place his son Jacob as an apprentice with the Parisian goldsmith Jacob David.


Portrait of the Prince of Wales

A year later the painter was back on the move to paint the portraits of princesses that were likely to marry the King after the latter had given up the idea of a wedding with Christine of Denmark. He thus went to Germany where he painted the portrait of Ann of Cleves and was rewarded with a consistent payment from the monarch whose liberality probably postponed his planned return to Basel.


Ann of Cleves (detail)

In England Holbein was becoming wealthier and the prospect of returning to live far away from the splendours of the English court probably did not please him much. In London his existence was that of a nobleman while he also had a mistress and two other children. Therefore one must not be surprised that he did not keep up his promise to be back in Basel in 1540.

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