VIRTUAL: Franny Moyle at the Hudson Library [3/18]
The Hudson Library will be hosting art historian Franny Moyle on March 18th at 2pm. Franny will discuss her latest book The King’s Painter: The Life of Hans Holbein.
*Note: this is a virtual event and you need to register to join. If you'd like to register, please click here.
The King’s Painter is a dramatic reappraisal of Renaissance master Hans Holbein, whose art shaped politics and immortalized the Tudors. This event is part of the Hudson Library & Historical Society’s “Tudor Month,” an educational immersion into the world of Renaissance England.
Hans Holbein the Younger is chiefly celebrated for his beautiful and precisely realized portraiture, which includes representations of Henry VIII, his advisors Thomas More and Thomas Cromwell, his wives Jane Seymour and Anne of Cleves, and an array of the Tudor lords and ladies encountered during two sojourns in England. But beyond these familiar images, which have come to define our perception of the age, Holbein was a multifaceted genius: a humanist, satirist, and political propagandist, and a deft man whose work was rich in layers of symbolism and allusion. The King’s Painter traces and analyzes the life and work of an extraordinary artist against the backdrop of an era of political turbulence and cultural transformation, to which his art offers a subtle and endlessly refracting mirror.
Franny Moyle is a critically acclaimed author and British television producer. She has written three previous books, The Extraordinary Life and Times of J.M.W. Turner, Constance: The Tragic and Scandalous Life of Mrs. Oscar Wilde, and Desperate Romantics: The Private Lives of the Pre-Raphaelites, which was adapted for television as a drama series in 2009 on BBC.
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From a distinguished art historian, a dramatic reappraisal of Renaissance master Hans Holbein, whose art shaped politics and immortalized the Tudors
Hans Holbein the Younger is chiefly celebrated for his beautiful and precisely realized portraiture, which includes representations of Henry VIII, his advisors Thomas More and Thomas Cromwell, his wives Jane Seymour and Anne of Clev