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Holbein's "Ambassadors" - Foister, Susan; Roy, Ashok; Wyld, Martin - Yale University Press
  • February 1998
    112 p., 8 x 11 5/8
    45 b/w + 67 color illus.
    ISBN: 9780300073263
    ISBN-10: 0300073267
  • Paper: $29.95 sc
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Art and Architecture
History

Series Information
National Gallery London Publications

Distributed by Yale University Press for National Gallery Publications, London


Holbein's "Ambassadors"

Making and Meaning

  • Susan Foister, Ashok Roy, and Martin Wyld
REVIEWS CONTENTS EXCERPTS INDEX

Holbein’s famous life-size double portrait The Ambassadors is one of the best known and most impressive of his surviving works. Yet the subject matter has always presented intriguing problems. Who precisely were the two ambassadors of the title? Why did they choose to be painted together—with an array of globes, astronomical and musical instruments, books and other objects placed on shelves between them, a skull concealed in the foreground of the painting, and a crucifix partially hidden behind a curtain? The recent careful cleaning and restoration of The Ambassadors has enabled an art historian, conservator, and scientist at the National Gallery in London to collaborate on a thorough study of the making and meaning of this fascinating painting.

The identity of the sitters—two French ambassadors to the court of Henry VIII of England—and why they were painted together are discussed in relation to the religious and power struggles in England and Europe. The authors clarify the iconography and the significance the wealth of objects in the picture may have had for the sitters. Their description of the making of this painting compared with the artists other surviving works and with other pictures of the period greatly increases our knowledge of Holbein’s techniques and working methods.

Susan Foister is Curator of Early Netherlandish, German, and British Paintings, Ashok Roy is Scientific Adviser, and Martin Wyld is Head of Conservation at the National Gallery, London.

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