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HANS HOLBEIN THE YOUNGER : A PIONEER IN REALISM

Cet article se compose de 19 pages.
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Holbein also drew his inspiration in some Swiss works or costumes of military men but owed much more to Flemish or Dutch artists who had come to work in Augsburg. His trip to Antwerp and his encounter with Quentin Metsys certainly played a major role in his career.

In addition, Holbein worked under the influence of many Italian artists as a result of the close relationship between Augsburg and Venice, which were not simply limited to the economic field. It seems probable that some rich people from his native town, like the Fugger family of bankers, were collecting some Venetian art pieces and that certain artists had been familiar with the paintings of Antonio da Messina, Crivelli, Bellini, Cima da Conegliano, Carpaccio, Giorgione or Titian.


Giorgione (Giorgio da Castelfranco),
Judith

Burgmayr himself had among his pupils a Venetian named Caspar Straffo while Holbein probably met some Italian artists in Basel, which was the crossroad between Italy and Germany. When he worked in Lucerne in 1517, Holbein certainly took the opportunity of visiting the neighbouring town of Milan, which in his 1538 contract with the Council of Basel, was listed among the cities in which he wanted to work.

Certain representations of fig trees and of architectural buildings in his works tend to suggest that he had visited the Lombardy region. He also had probably acquainted with the paintings of Leonardo da Vinci and been influenced by these as revealed in his portrait of Dorothea von Offenburg, which has a strange “Leonard” look. All the more his painting of the Last Supper, now in the museum of Basel, offers some striking similarities with a Leonard's painting.

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