Why Henry VIII's Codpiece Is So...Monumental

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Perhaps the most prominent part of the most well-known painting of Henry VIII (a now-lost work by Hans Holbein the Younger) is the giant codpiece poking through the male-heirless king's tunic. Evan Puschak analyzes the painting and fills us in on what makes this a particularly effective work of 16th-century propaganda.

Puschak had some fun with this one...I lol'd at "triple dick", which under no circumstances should you google (like I did) at work or really anywhere else. Although, "triple dick art history" did lead me to this interesting piece on "ostentatio genitalium":

Ostentatio genitalium (the display of the genitals) refers to disparate traditions in Renaissance visual culture of attributing formal, thematic, and theological significance to the penis of Jesus.

This bit got me laughing again:

...these Renaissance images shock us because they are so frequently ithyphallic: Christ has risen, but not in the way we have come to expect.

Tags: art · art school · Evan Puschak · Hans Holbein the Younger · Henry VIII · religion · video

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