The Ambassadors (Holbein)

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The Ambassadors
Hans Holbein the Younger, 1533
Oil on oak
207 × 209.5 cm
National Gallery, London

The Ambassadors (1533) is a painting by Hans Holbein the Younger in the National Gallery, London.

Until 1900 and the publication of Mary Hervey's Holbein's Ambassadors: The Picture and the Men, the identity of the sitters in The Ambassadors was a matter of intense speculation. Hervey identified the sitters as (on the left) Jean de Dinteville (1504-1555), French ambassador to England in 1533, and (on the right) Georges de Selve (1508/09-1541), Bishop of Lavaur, who visited Dinteville in London in Spring of the same year. Hervey's identification remained art-historical dogma for a century. More recently it has been challenged, with Jean's elder brother François de Dinteville (1498-1554), Bishop of Auxerre, being put forward as a replacement for de Selve (Hudson, 2003). François was the French ambassador to Rome from 1531 to 1533, as well as (unlike de Selve) a noted patron of the arts and sciences. The new identification is supported by the earliest manuscript to describe the painting, a 1589 inventory of the Chateau of Polisy, the Dinteville home.

As well as being a double portrait, the painting contains a still life of several meticulously rendered objects, the meaning of which is the cause of much debate.

Although a German-born artist whose career was based mainly in England, Holbein displayed the influence of contemporary Dutch painters in this work. This influence can be noted most outwardly in the use of oil paint, a recent invention whose technique was first taken advantage of by Flemish masters. What is most "Flemish" of Holbein's use of oils is his use of the medium to render meticulous details that are mainly symbolic: as Van Eyck and the Master of Flemalle used extensive imagery to link their subjects to divinity, Holbein used symbols to link his figures to the age of exploration.

Among the clues to the figures' explorative associations are two globes, a sextant, an astrolabe, and the various textiles: The floor mosaic, based on a design extant in Westminster Abbey, and the cloth on the upper shelf, which is most notably oriental. The choice for the inclusion of the two figures can furthermore be seen as symbolic. The figure on the left is in secular attire while the figure on the right is dressed in protestant religious garb. They are flanking the table, which displays open books, symbols of religious knowledge and even a symbolic link to the Virgin, is therefore believed to be symbolic of a unification of capitalism and the Church.

The anamorphic skull
The anamorphic skull

The most notable and famous of Holbein's symbols in the work, however, is the skewed skull which is placed in the bottom centre of the composition. The skull, rendered in anamorphic perspective, another invention of the Early Renaissance, is meant to be nearly subliminal as the viewer must approach the painting nearly from the side of the painting to see the form morph into a completely accurate rendering of a human skull. While the skull is evidently intended as a vanitas or memento mori, it is unclear why Holbein gave it such prominence in this painting. One possibility is that this painting represents three levels: the heavens (as portrayed by the astrolabe and other objects on the upper shelf), the living world (as evidenced by books and a musical instrument on the lower shelf), and death (signified by the skull). It has also been hypothesized that the painting is meant to hang in a stairwell, so that a person walking up the stairs from the painting's right would be startled by the appearance of the skull. A further possibility is that Holbein simply wished to show off his ability with the technique in order to secure future commissions.[1].

One other part of this artwork that is commonly over looked is the very top left of this double portrait. If you look closely at a large image of this painting you will see that there is a picture of Jesus on the cross behind the curtain.


[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Mary Hervey, Holbein's Ambassadors: The Picture and the Men (George Bell and Sons: London, 1900)
  • Susan Foister, Ashok Roy and Martin Wyld, Making and Meaning: Holbein's Ambassadors (National Gallery Publications: London, 1997)
  • Giles Hudson, “The Vanity of the Sciences [Essay Review of John North, The Ambassadors' Secret: Holbein and the World of the Renaissance]”, Annals of Science, vol. 60 no. 2 (April, 2003), pp. 201-205

[edit] External links