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Sr. Contributor

The Ambassadors is one of Europe's most famous paintings, and all we can do is agree that no one knows anything about it.

Okay, there's a couple things we know for sho'. The heavyweight on the left is Jean de Dinteville, the 29-year old ambassador from France to the court of England's crazy-horny king, Henry VIII. Poindexter to the right is Georges de Selve, 25-year old bishop elect who served kind of as an ambassador at large to some of the most powerful names in 16th century European royalty. The top table is covered in objects related to and for measuring the heavens, and the lower table is littered with bric-a-brac related to this mortal plane. Oh, and there's a skull you can only see from the side. But you probably already turned your computer or phone to see it (if you haven't yet, you should).

Theories about the painting are easiest if split into two camps. The first revolves around the personal relationship between these fellas. Some folks say they're friends, others say that their hands line up at Dinteville's codpiece for a reason. Either way, the most convincing theory goes that de Selve commissioned the dual-portrait as a parting gift to his dear friend and ally Dinteville. De Selve was getting shipped out to play ambassador to the ascendent Venetian Republic, and Dinteville would keep up his commute between France and England for the time being. Dinteville put the portrait in his family's mansion, reserving viewings for best friends and treasured guests.

The other theory is considerably more conspiratorial. The major conflict between England and the rest of Europe at that point was over Catholicism. King Henry created the Church of England in order to be able to divorce his wives in a quest for a son and heir. England's bad breakup with the Holy See was mirrored by Martin Luther's struggle to reform German Catholicism, which resulted in widespread Protestantism. Everyone worried these divisions would blow up any moment into a full out Civil War among Christendom. It was the verge of the Middle Ages all over again. So it's likely not a coincidence that the math text on the lower table is opened to dividing, the hymnal next to it is Lutheran, and there's a sneaky crucifix at the painting's top left, with Christ playing hide-and-go-seek behind that kick ass green curtain. I don't know if it amounts to hints of a conspiracy, but best to leave those determinations to the experts in tinfoil hats.

The Ambassadors' side gig as pop culture fodder has been pretty lively in the past couple decades, albeit not exactly in-yo-face. The anamorphic skull is on the cover for Green Day's Insomniac. The painting's subjects are put at the middle of a conspiracy theory in the BBC drama Hunted. And, finally, for some reason, a character pees on the artwork in the 2011 drama Calvary, about a priest threatened with execution by a former sex abuse victim from Church. 

 

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The following is an excerpt from "Hans Holbein" by Arthur B. Chamberlain, Deputy Keeper of the Birmingham Art Gallery, published in 1902:

The picture popularly known as The Ambassadors, formerly in the collection of the Earl of Radnor at Longford Castle, was purchased for the nation in 1890. Until that year the left-hand figure was always supposed to represent Sir Thomas Wyatt, poet and diplomatist, and his companion some unknown friend and fellow Ambassador, who, Dr. Woltmann suggested, was John Leland. When the picture was first exhibited in the National Gallery many suggestions were made as to their real identity, the most important being that of Mr. W. F. Dickes, who wrote several long articles to prove that they were the German Counts Palatine Otto Henry and his brother Philip, and that the picture represented “The Nuremberg Treaty of Religious Freedom between the Catholics and Protestants.” Happily, the matter was settled in 1895 by Miss Mary F. S. Hervey, who discovered documentary evidence of so exact a kind that no doubt remains that the portraits are those of Jean de Dinteville, seigneur de Polizy, bailly de Troyes, and a knight of the French Order of St. Michael, and his friend, George de Selve, Bishop of Lavaur. Mr. Dickes, however, has recently returned to the charge (1901), doubts the evidence, and still pins his faith to his Counts Palatine.

Dinteville came here as French Ambassador more than once, and was in London in that capacity from February to November, 1533, the year in which the picture was painted, and during that time De Selve paid him a visit. George de Selve was appointed to the see of Lavaur in 1526, when only eighteen, but was not consecrated Bishop until 1534, and so in the picture is not shown in episcopal dress. He was one of six brothers, nearly all of whom gained distinction as Ambassadors. He himself served as Ambassador on a number of occasions, and his piety, his profound learning, and his keen interest in all intellectual pursuits, as Miss Hervey tells us in her exhaustive study of these two men and their picture, made him one of the most remarkable men of his day.

The two men stand on each side of a high, two-shelved table. Dinteville, on the left, is gorgeously dressed in a doublet of rose satin, with a black jacket and surcoat lined with ermine. His dark hair is cut straight across his forehead. De Selve, on the right, is clad in a long brocaded gown of chocolate colour, lined with brown fur. His hair and beard are also dark. Both shelves of the table are covered with a number of books, mathematical, musical, and other instruments, including a celestial and a terrestrial globe, sundial, lute, flutes, and other emblems of the pursuits in which they were interested. The curious object in the foreground is merely a distorted skull, which, when looked at from the side, assumes its proper proportions—a kind of optical puzzle, which had some vogue in the sixteenth century. The pattern of the pavement of coloured marbles was copied by the artist from the one in the Sanctuary of Westminster Abbey.

The many details of the picture have been painted with Holbein’s usual accuracy and perfection. The faces of the two men are finely and delicately modelled, though their character is not quite so subtly expressed as in such a portrait as the Duchess of Milan. The dark, penetrating eyes and well-chiselled mouth of Dinteville give vitality to his intellectual face. De Selve is grave in contrast, with dark eyebrows and a more pallid complexion, and his countenance has less expression than is to be found in the other. The nobility of type of these two well-born, intellectual men is, however, admirably depicted by Holbein in a picture which is splendid both in colour and in treatment.

 

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Here is what Wikipedia says about The Ambassadors (Holbein)

The Ambassadors is a 1533 painting by Hans Holbein the Younger.

Also known as Jean de Dinteville and Georges de Selve, after the two people it portrays, it was created in the Tudor period, in the same year Elizabeth I was born. Franny Moyle speculates that Elizabeth's mother, Anne Boleyn, then Queen of England, might have commissioned it as a gift for Jean de Dinteville, the French ambassador, portrayed on the left. De Selve was a Catholic Bishop.

As well as being a double portrait, the painting contains a still life of meticulously rendered objects, the meaning of which is the cause of much debate. An array of expensive scientific objects, related to knowing the time and the cosmos are prominently displayed. Several refer to Rome, the seat of the Pope. A second shelf of objects shows a lute with a broken string, a symbol of discord, next to a hymnal composed by Martin Luther.

It incorporates one of the best-known examples of anamorphosis in painting. While most scholars have taken the view that the painting should be viewed side on to see the skull, others believe a glass tube was used to see the skull head on. Either way, death is both prominent and obscured until discovered. Less easily spotted is a carving of Jesus on a crucifix, half hidden behind a curtain at the top left.

The Ambassadors has been part of London's National Gallery collection since its purchase in 1890. They extensively restored the painting in 1997, leading to criticism, in particular, that the skull's dimensions had been changed.

Check out the full Wikipedia article about The Ambassadors (Holbein)

Comments (2)

hudson garrison

I couldn't get the skull to show up when I looked at it~! Somethings wrong with my eyes, maybe?

Zhengyu Zhou

The two men, dressed in silk, stood proudly and proclaimed their wealth of knowledge and nobilit