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Portrait of Erasmus of Rotterdam, National Gallery, London
The Louvre, 1523

Hans Holbein the Younger painted the Portrait of Erasmus of Rotterdam several times, and his paintings were much copied, at the time and later. It is difficult to disentangle Holbein's original work from that of his workshop and other copyists. Possibly five largely original versions survive, as well as a number of drawings made as studies.

Holbein's portraits played an important part in spreading the painter's reputation across Europe, as they and their copies were widely distributed. When Holbein moved to England he had a letter of recommendation from Erasmus to Thomas More, in whose house he initially lived.

Commission

Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam (1466/69–1536) was a renowned humanist scholar and theologian. He moved in 1521 to Basel, the city where Hans Holbein the Younger lived and had his workshop. Such was the fame of Erasmus, who corresponded with scholars throughout Europe, that he needed many portraits of himself to send abroad to his protectors; although not an admirer of painting, he understood the power of image. [1] Quentin Matsys painted a noticeably younger Erasmus, writing, in 1517, [2] and used another profile portrait for a medal in 1519. [3] Albrecht Dürer made a portrait in engraving in 1526. But it was Holbein's images that were endlessly copied. Of the work, Erasmus wrote in 1524, "Recently I sent again two portraits of Erasmus to France, painted by a very skillful artist. The artist carried along my portrait to France." [1]

Versions

There are three main portrait types: a three-quarters view, probably of 1523, best known from the National Gallery version; a profile view also from 1523, reading, as in the Louvre, and an older three-quarters view, perhaps c. 1530, probably best represented by the portrait miniature, a roundel 10 cm across, in the Kunstmuseum Basel. The French jurist and professor at the University of Bourges François Douaren received a copy of the roundel by Bonifacius Amerbach. [4] The copies painter is not known, but it might have been Jacob Clauser. [4] Douaren was a teacher of Amerbachs son Basilius at Bourges. [4] Douarens portrait is lost to date but it could have been the one, which the Museum of Rotterdam bought in 1862. [4] This portrait fell victim to a fire shortly after the museum bought it. [4]

All of these were produced in many versions, several probably at least partly by Holbein himself, or supervised by him. The pose and face tends to remain the same, but the clothes and backgrounds vary. It seems to have been Holbein's practice to make a very careful drawing of his subjects (though no full drawings for any of these portraits survive) and to then produce the painted portrait without the sitter being present. The Louvre has drawings done as studies for the hands of both its painted version and the London version.

There is also a small emblematic depiction of an idealized Erasmus as the Roman god Terminus (his personal emblem), of 1532, now in the Cleveland Museum of Art.

London

The version also known as Portrait of Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam with Renaissance Pilaster is a 1523 painting in oil and tempera on panel, in the National Gallery, London (on long-term loan from the Earl of Radnor). Historian David Starkey has said "arguably this is the most important portrait in England. It is where portraiture actually begins." [5]

Holbein painted three much-copied portraits of Erasmus in 1523, of which this is the largest and most elaborate. It is likely the one sent to William Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury, in England. Holbein later painted Warham after he travelled to England in 1526 in search of work, with a recommendation from Erasmus, who had once lived in England himself. The painting was formerly at Longford Castle, home of the Earl of Radnor, and may be referred to by this.

Erasmus is show resting his hands on a book, with Greek and Latin words that translate to "The Herculean Labours of Erasmus of Rotterdam". [6] According to art historian Stephanie Buck, this portrait is "an idealized picture of a sensitive, highly cultivated scholar, and this was precisely how Erasmus wanted to be remembered by future generations". [7]

Holbein's portrait of Erasmus includes a Latin couplet presumably by the scholar, inscribed on the edge of the leaning book on the shelf: "I am Johannes Holbein, whom it is easier to denigrate than to emulate." [5] Holbein has also placed an empty wine flask on the shelf.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Bätschmann; Griener, 155
  2. ^ "Quinten Massys (1465/6-1530) - Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536)". www.rct.uk. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  3. ^ Stein, Wilhelm (1929). Holbein der Jüngere. Berlin: Julius Bard Verlag. p. 78.
  4. ^ a b c d e Jenny, Beat R. (1995). Jacob-Friesen, Holger; Jenny, Beat R. (eds.). Bonifacius Amerbach (in German). Basel: Schwabe Verlag. p. 69. ISBN  9783796510083.
  5. ^ a b "Hans Holbein the Younger | Erasmus | L658". www.nationalgallery.org.uk. National Gallery, London. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
  6. ^ Bacchi, Elisa (2019). "Hercules, silenus and the fly : Lucian's rhetorical paradoxes in Erasmus' ethics". Philosophical Readings. 11 (2): 120–130. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.2554134. ISSN  2036-4989.
  7. ^ Buck, Stephanie. Hans Holbein. Cologne: Könemann, 1999, ISBN  3829025831, p. 50

Sources

  • Bätschmann, Oskar & Griener, Pascal. Hans Holbein. Reaktion Books, 1999. ISBN  1-86189-040-0