The Book of Art for Young People eBook

Martin Conway
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 147 pages of information about The Book of Art for Young People.

The Book of Art for Young People eBook

Martin Conway
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 147 pages of information about The Book of Art for Young People.

In England, owing to the effects of the Wars of the Roses, good painters no longer existed.  A century of neglect had destroyed English painting.  Henry VIII., therefore, had to look to foreign lands for his court painter, and where was he to come from?  France was the nearest country, but the French King was in the same predicament as Henry.  He obtained his painters from Italy, and at one time secured the services of Leonardo da Vinci; but Italy was a long way off and it would suit Henry better to get a painter from Flanders or Germany if it were possible.  So Erasmus advised Holbein to go to England, and gave him a letter to Sir Thomas More.  On this first visit in 1526, he painted the portraits of More and his whole family, and of many other distinguished men; but it was not till his second visit in 1532 that he became Henry VIII.’s court painter.  In this capacity he had to decorate the walls of the King’s palaces, design the pageantry of the Royal processions, and paint the portraits of the King’s family.  Although Holbein could do and did do anything that was demanded of him, what he liked best was to paint portraits.  Romantic subjects such as the fight of St. George and the dragon, or an idyll of the Golden Age, little suited the artistic leanings of a German.  To a German or a Fleming the world of facts meant more than the world of imagination; the painting of men and women as they looked in everyday life was more congenial to them than the painting of saints and imaginary princesses.

But how unimportant seems all talk of contrasting imagination and reality when we see them fused together in this charming portrait of Edward, the child Prince of Wales.  It belongs to the end of the year 1538, when he was just fifteen months old, and the imagination of Holbein equipped him with the orb of sovereignty in the guise of a baby’s rattle.  It is in the coupling of distant kingship and present babyhood that the painter works his magic and reveals his charm.

[Illustration:  EDWARD, PRINCE OF WALES, AFTERWARDS EDWARD VI.  From the picture by Holbein, in the Collection of the Earl of Yarborough, London]

If you recall for a moment what you know of Henry VIII., his masterful pride, his magnificence, his determination to do and have exactly what he wanted, you will understand that his demands upon his court painter for a portrait of his only son and heir must have been high.  No one could say enough about this wonderful child to please Henry, for all that was said in praise of him redounded to the glory of his father.

The following is a translation of the Latin poem beneath the picture: 

  Child, of thy Father’s virtues be thou heir,
  Since none on earth with him may well compare;
  Hardly to him might Heaven yield a son
  By whom his father’s fame should be out-done. 
  So, if thou equal such a mighty sire,
  No higher can the hopes of man aspire;
  If thou surpass him, thou shalt honoured be
  O’er all that ruled before, or shall rule after thee.[3]

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Project Gutenberg
The Book of Art for Young People from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.