Portrait of sir thomas wyatt. Oil on panel, 47 cm diameter, national portrait gallery, london. This oil portrait of wyatt á l'antique, wearing an antique drape in a medallic composition, derives from a lost drawing or painting by hans holbein the younger of about 1540. Holbein's woodcut for leland's naenia, in which wyatt also wears an antique drape, presumably follows the original version. Four 16th-century copies by other hands survive, of which this is one of two at the national portrait gallery (for the other, see "other versions" below). Thomas wyatt (1503?–42) was a diplomat and a gifted poet who introduced the italian sonnet form to england. He was arrested after the fall of anne boleyn, whom he had admired in poetry, but he recovered to become ambassador to the emperor charles v before being arrested again in 1541. Holbein also designed goldsmiths' work for wyatt. References
susan foister, holbein in england, london: tate, 2006, 1854376454, p. 56. K. T. Parker, the drawings of hans holbein at windsor castle, oxford: phaidon, 1945, oclc 822974, p. 54. Roy strong, tudor and jacobean portraits, london: hmso, 1969, p. 339. Object Type: painting. Genre: portrait. Date: 16th century. Dimensions: height: 47 cm (18.5 in) ; width: 47 cm (18.5 in). Medium: oil on panel. Depicted People: Thomas Wyatt. Collection: National Portrait Gallery. Sir Thomas Wyatt by Hans Holbein the Younger (2)
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