Room 2
The paintings by northern European artists in this gallery represent a broad geographical area, including modern-day Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, as well as Britain, where the German-born Holbein spent a portion of his career.
With the exception of the large religious painting of the Deposition of Christ by Gerard David, the works in this room are intimate in their format—are smaller in scale and invite close looking at minute details—and they all share the general characteristic of highly naturalistic precision for which northern European art of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries is traditionally celebrated. But beyond such common stylistic features, their subjects and functions are diverse, ranging from Memling’s and Holbein’s portraits of contemporary sitters to Van Eyck’s and David’s sacred subjects to Bruegel’s sinewy soldiers painted in grisaille, possibly as a model for a printmaker.
Henry Clay Frick brought together in his collection two portraits of mortal enemies: Holbein’s portraits in vivid detail of Sir Thomas More and Sir Thomas Cromwell, who was largely responsible for the execution of Thomas More. Holbein’s portraits, like most portraits do, capture these men at the height of their power, a power that was not to last. Both men were ultimately beheaded by order of their king, Henry VIII.
At the heart of these conflicts was the question of religion—the Christian faith here represented by David’s Deposition and Van Eyck’s enthroned Virgin and Christ Child. In them, the divine beings are presented with the same illusion of tangible reality as the mere mortals in this room.
Sir Thomas More
Thomas More (1477/78–1535), humanist scholar, author, and statesman, served Henry VIII as diplomatic envoy and Privy Councillor prior to his election as speaker of the House of Commons in 1523. The chain More wears in this portrait is an emblem of service to the King, not of any specific office. In 1529 More succeeded Cardinal Wolsey as Lord Chancellor, but three years later he resigned that office over the issue of Henry’s divorce from Catherine of Aragon, and subsequently he refused to subscribe to the Act of Supremacy making the King head of the Church of England. For this he was convicted of high treason and beheaded. Venerated by the Catholic Church as a martyr, More was beatified in 1886 and canonized in 1935 on the four-hundredth anniversary of his death. Holbein’s sympathy for the man whose guest he was upon first arriving in England is apparent in the Frick portrait. His brilliant rendering of the rich fabrics and adornments make this one of Holbein’s best and most popular paintings. Various versions of the portrait exist, but this is undoubtedly the original.
Source: Art in The Frick Collection: Paintings, Sculpture, Decorative Arts, New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1996.
The London dealer Farrer. Henry Huth. Edward Huth. Knoedler. Frick, 1912.
Source: Paintings in The Frick Collection: American, British, Dutch, Flemish and German. Volume I. New York: The Frick Collection, 1968.