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Renaissance Art, European Art
Hans Holbein by Oskar Batschmann β€” book cover

Hans Holbein

by Oskar Batschmann, Pascal Griener
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Overview

Holbein was a hugely ambitious artist, and even during his formative years in Lucerne and Basle undertook to make designs for jewelry, stained glass and woodcuts as well as to paint major altarpieces and portraits. He also carried out several monumental decorative schemes for private houses and civic buildings. This book offers both a remarkable range of extant visual evidence and a rewarding and scholarly account of Holbein's oeuvre in its full historical and artistic contexts. In addition, the authors include a reappraisal of the high reputation in which Holbein was held during the centuries following his death, as illustrated by the opinion expressed by the Elizabethan miniaturist Nicholas Hilliard and the searches undertaken by the French collector Charles Patin, and by the remarks and exertions of the wealthy eighteenth-century dilettante Horace Walpole.

Synopsis

Hans Holbein the Younger (1497/8-1543), one of the most versatile and admired painters of the Northern Renaissance, trained under his father in Augsburg and then worked for leading patrons in Switzerland before settling in England as Court Painter to Henry VIII. To commemorate the five-hundredth anniversary of the artist's birth, Oskar Bätschmann and Pascal Griener offer this richly illustrated book--the first comprehensive monograph on the artist to appear in more than forty years--which is a major advance in our understanding of Holbein's contribution to European art. The authors reexamine every aspect of a remarkable career, and further illuminate the artistic and cultural influences that affected the artist.Holbein was a hugely ambitious artist, and even during his formative years in Lucerne and Basel, made designs for jewelry, stained glass, and woodcuts, and painted major altarpieces and portraits. He also carried out several monumental decorative schemes for private houses and civic buildings. In his commissions, Holbein sought to rival the greatest masters of Germany and Italy, most notably Dürer and Mantegna, and by the time of his visit to France in 1524 he was determined to secure a position as Court Painter. However, Holbein soon found himself in a precarious situation as a result of the Reformation's increasing hostility toward religious works, and he left for England in 1532. While in England, in addition to decorative schemes and Triumphs, he both drew and painted numerous unrivaled likenesses of leading courtiers, merchants, and diplomats, among which is his celebrated double portrait, The Ambassadors. This book offers both a remarkable range of extant visualevidence and a rewarding and scholarly account of Holbein's oeuvre in its full historical and artistic contexts.

Kenneth Baker - San Francisco Chronicle

Like only a few other painters in history, Holbein made the human likeness seem to erase the distance between his time and ours.... This readable scholarly book not only situates Holbein carefully in his own time but teaches us how to read his paintings and prints in depth.

About the Author, Oskar Batschmann

Oskar Bätschmann is professor of history of art at the University of Bern and is the author of Giovanni Bellini. Pascal Griener is professor of history of art at the Institute of Art History in Neuchatel, Switzerland.

 

Reviews

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Editorials

The New York Review - Willibald Sauerlander

Hans Holbein is a stimulating book with many new insights and suggestions.

The New York Review - Willibald Sauerländer


Hans Holbein is a stimulating book with many new insights and suggestions.

San Francisco Chronicle

Like only a few other painters in history, Holbein made the human likeness seem to erase the distance between his time and ours.... This readable scholarly book not only situates Holbein carefully in his own time but teaches us how to read his paintings and prints in depth.
β€” Kenneth Baker

The New York Review

Hans Holbein is a stimulating book with many new insights and suggestions.
β€” Willibald SauerlΓ€nder

The New York Review

Hans Holbein is a stimulating book with many new insights and suggestions.
β€” Willibald Sauerlander

San Francisco Chronicle

β€œThis readable scholarly book not only situates Holbein carefully in his own time but teaches us how to read his paintings and prints in depth.”

The Independent on Sunday

β€œHans Holbein is a major contribution to the understanding of 16th-century humanist art.”

Times Literary Supplement

β€œThe authors reveal a real sympathy for and an understanding of the mixed character of Holbein’s work. . . . Fresh and rewarding.”

Book Details

Published
January 1, 1999
Publisher
Princeton University Press
Pages
256
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780691005164

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