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HANS HOLBEIN THE YOUNGER : A PIONEER IN REALISM

Cet article se compose de 19 pages.
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His last known work was a 1543 drawing of clock which was to be made for the King.

Holbein was truly the first painter to introduce the notion of psychology in portrait painting showing his sitters as they were in life and giving a remarkable insight of the daily existence of humans beings of the Renaissance period through spectacular details shown in many works.

Last but not least, Holbein was also a remarkable painter of religious-related subjects though he somewhat appeared not to be very much concerned when it came to underline the idealised spirituality of his models.

Holbein worked under several artistic, national or religious influences and managed to gather all these in his works without reducing his originality. He first was under the influence of Swabian and German artists and then under those of the Netherlands and Italy.


Swabian School

Swabian artists had already brought a new dimension to portrait painting, which Holbein further extended. One may believe that Hans Holbein was closely linked to painters like Multscher, Friedrich Herlin, Martin Schaffner, Bernhard Strigel, Christoph Amberger or Burgmayr who already were prone to produce realistic paintings. However Hans' major influence came above all from his father who gave him all the proper recipes that eventually enabled him to surpass many great masters.

Holbein was also by nature a psychologist who was deeply interested in the attitudes of his likes going as far as to produce caricatures of them or to show the torturers of Christ dressed in Bavarian costumes, the Bavarians being the hereditary enemies of the people of Augsburg.


Scourging of Christ with tormenters
in Bavarian costumes (1517)

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