Tag Archives: Hans Holbein the Younger

Hans Holbein The Younger’s The Ambassadors (1533)

The Ambas­sadors is a 1533 paint­ing by Ger­man-born Hans Hol­bein the Younger (1497–1543). To put things into con­text, 1533 was the year that Eliz­a­beth I was born, and was slap bang at the dawn­ing of what his­to­ri­ans would come to call the Sci­en­tif­ic Rev­o­lu­tion (con­ven­tion­al­ly launched by the pub­li­ca­tion of Copernicus’s De rev­o­lu­tion­ibus orbium coelestium in 1543). Whilst at first sight, the paint­ing is a dou­ble por­trait (of French diplo­mat Jean de Din­teville and bish­op Georges de Selve), clos­er inspec­tion shows so much more. There is a metic­u­lous­ly ren­dered array of sci­en­tif­ic devices, books and a lute, as well as one of the best-known exam­ples of anamor­pho­sis in art (a dis­tort­ed pro­jec­tion of a skull that can only be prop­er­ly viewed from a spe­cif­ic van­tage point).

I’m not a fan of the anamor­phic skull to be hon­est, it’s kind of jarring…but the rest is spec­tac­u­lar. I’ve seen this up close and per­son­al at the Nation­al Gallery and it is remark­able in its detail. Let’s see some of those details. There are two globes (a ter­res­tri­al one and a celes­tial one), a shep­herd’s dial, a quad­rant, a tor­que­tum, and a poly­he­dral sun­di­al, each exquis­ite­ly paint­ed.

The lute can be seen to have a bro­ken string, inter­pret­ed as a sym­bol of dis­cord, per­haps between sci­ence and reli­gion. Near the lute is a Luther­an hym­nal, in which the words and music can be read, and an arith­metic book with minute equa­tions depict­ed.

Hol­bein was pret­ty good with fab­ric, too. The upper shelf is lined by an Ana­to­lian car­pet, a fea­ture that pops up in many a Hol­bein. The chap on the left is in sec­u­lar garb, the one on the right is in cler­i­cal cloth­ing, both ren­dered fine­ly, and per­haps, again, a sym­bol of reli­gious strife. The back­drop, mean­while, is a rich­ly green, thick­ly fold­ed cur­tain (to the top left of which a small cru­ci­fix is peep­ing out).

Hol­bein moved to Eng­land in 1526 and wel­comed into the human­ist cir­cle of Sir Thomas More. He soon built a strong rep­u­ta­tion which is why you can see scores of his paint­ing in the Nation­al Por­trait Gallery too.

Hans Hol­bein, The Ambas­sadors
Hans Hol­bein the Younger