Hans Holbein the Elder, active in Augsburg…
1492 CE to 1503 CE
Hans Holbein the Elder, active in Augsburg and Isenheim from about 1490, had painted in this year an altarpiece panel, The Death of the Virgin; the work’s strong Flemish influence suggests that he traveled to the Low Countries before settling in the free imperial city of Augsburg, where he maintains a large studio.
The prolific painter was born in Augsburg and belongs to a celebrated family of painters; his father is Michael Holbein; his brother was Sigmund Holbein.
He has two sons, both artists and printmakers: Ambrosius Holbein and Hans Holbein the Younger, who both have their first painting lessons from their father.
The date of Holbein's birth is unknown.
His name appears in the Augsburg tax books in 1494, superseding that of his father.
Holbein had a following as early as 1493, and he worked that year at the abbey at Weingarten, creating the wings of an altarpiece representing Joachim's Offering, the Nativity of the Virgin Mary's Presentation in the Temple, and the Presentation of Christ.
Today they hang in separate panels in the cathedral of Augsburg.