Ambrosius Volmar Keller was the nephew of the prior of Saint-Pierre-le-Jeune Church, at a time when that church still entirely belonged to the Catholic Church, and had just been made canon; he would himself become prior of Saint-Pierre-le-Jeune in 1558. The solemn portrait celebrates the young Keller's gravitas and new social status.[1][2]
Ambrosius Volmar Keller is Baldung's largest and last portrait painting, and the only one in which he used a landscape as a background. The symbolism of the conspicuous grapevine growing behind Keller's back has not been entirely explained, it could be related to Christianity or to Northern European Renaissance humanism. The fact that Keller is sitting on the left and looking to the right suggests that the portrait may have had a lost pendant, maybe a portrait of the elder Keller.[3] The donation of the painting to the Strasbourg museum by Emperor Wilhelm II constituted an important gesture in the early stages of the reconstruction of the municipal collections, which had been totally destroyed in 1870, during the Siege of Strasbourg.[4]
References
^ abcBroucke, Camille (December 2013). Musée de l'Oeuvre Notre-Dame. Arts du Moyen-Âge et de la Renaissance. Strasbourg: Éditions des Musées de Strasbourg. p. 183. ISBN9782351251058.
^ abDupeux, Cécile (December 1999). Strasbourg - Musée de l'Oeuvre Notre-Dame. Paris: Éditions Scala. pp. 84–85. ISBN2-86656-223-2.
^Söding, Ulrich (2019). Hans Baldung Grien heilig | unheilig. Deutscher Kunstverlag. pp. 228–229. ISBN978-3-422-97981-9.
^Dupeux, Cécile (October 2009). Hans Haug, homme de musées. Une passion à l'oeuvre. Strasbourg: Musées de la ville de Strasbourg. pp. 96–97. ISBN978-2-35125-071-6.