
Portrait of a Woman
Historical Context
Hans Holbein the Elder's Portrait of a Woman from 1515 was painted when the elder Holbein was at the height of his career in Augsburg, the wealthy South German imperial city whose merchants and humanists provided steady patronage for painted portraits. Holbein the Elder was among the leading German painters of his generation, his work combining Flemish naturalistic precision with the South German decorative tradition, producing portraits of considerable psychological depth for his prosperous merchant clients. This late work, painted the year of Hans Holbein the Younger's first independent commissions, shows how thoroughly the elder Holbein had absorbed the Flemish tradition of specific physiognomic description while maintaining the formal clarity of German portraiture. The comparison between father and son's work in the same period illuminates both the family tradition and the generational development of German Renaissance portraiture.
Technical Analysis
The precise, linear drawing and detailed rendering of the sitter's headdress and costume reflect the Late Gothic portrait tradition of Southern Germany that the elder Holbein practiced throughout his career.
Look Closer
- ◆The headdress is depicted with careful attention to the complex folds of white linen, showing mastery of fabric with sculptural precision.
- ◆Her direct, level gaze is characteristic of Holbein the Elder's female portraiture — composed and undemonstrative.
- ◆The neck chain is rendered with fine metalwork detail, each link catching light separately and distinctly.
- ◆The architectural background — a painted niche — places the figure in the south German Renaissance tradition of portrait against fictive stone space.







