|
German painter associated
with the Augsburg school. He was the senior member of a family of painters
that included his brother Sigmund and his sons Ambrosius (c. 1494-1519/20)
and the famous Hans Holbein the Younger.
Nothing is known
of Holbein's early life and training, but he was married and established
as a painter in Augsburg by about 1493. Holbein's early works, which include
the Weingarten Altar (1493; Augsburg Cathedral), the St Afra Altar (c.
1495; parts in the bishop's palace at Eichstätt), the picture called the
Basilica of St Mary (1499; Augsburg), and a Passion series in 12 scenes
(Donaueschingen), are characterized by deep, rich colouring and by balanced
compositions of figures moving slowly and deliberately on a narrow stage.
There is also a Death of the Virgin, signed and dated 149-, in Budapest,
and a sketchbook, mostly of portrait drawings, in Berlin, which includes
a double portrait of his two sons. These works show a knowledge of the
art of Rogier van der Weyden, which has led some authorities to suppose
that Holbein had visited the Netherlands, but ignorance of his Augsburg
predecessors precludes any real evaluation of the immediate sources of
his style.
A visit in 1501
to Frankfurt am Main, where, with the assistance of Sigmund Holbein and
Leonhard Beck, he painted the high altar of the Dominican monastery (Städelsches
Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt am Main), initiated a new stylistic phase that
includes also the Kaisheim Altar (1502; Munich) and the Basilica of St
Paul (c. 1503-04; Augsburg). These paintings have much greater depth than
before, with a freer grouping of highly individualized figures - often
portraits - in rather lively movement. It has been suggested that this
new manner was perhaps inspired by a contact with the early work of
Matthias Grünewald in Frankfurt.
In a third and
last phase, after 1510, including the St Catherine Altar (1512; Augsburg),
the St Sebastian Altar (1516; Munich), and the Fountain of Life (1519;
Lisbon), Holbein began to use Italianate ornament and evolved a compromise
between the late Gothic and Renaissance styles similar to that of Gerard
David in Bruges. However, he then found himself overshadowed by artists
whose grasp of the Italian idiom was sounder than his own. In 1517, having
fallen into financial difficulties, Holbein left Augsburg and went to
Isenheim.
Holbein's honesty
and insight as a portraitist are best seen in his many silverpoint drawings.
It is clear that the portraiture of his more famous son must have owed
much to his teaching. He also made designs for glass painting, and windows
were designed by him in Eichstätt Cathedral (1502) and in the churches
of St Ulrich at Augsburg and St James at Straubing (where there is also
a panel painting by him).
Works
|