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Pierre Le Gros the Elder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pierre Le Gros
Vénus sortant du Bain, 1685-89, Gardens of Versailles
Born
Chartres
BaptisedMay 27, 1629
DiedMay 11, 1714(1714-05-11) (aged 84)
Paris
NationalityFrench
OccupationSculptor
StyleBaroque

Pierre Le Gros the Elder (baptised 27 May 1629 Chartres – died 11 May 1714 Paris)[1] was a French sculptor in the service of King Louis XIV.

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  • Cranach, Adam and Eve

Transcription

(music) ("In The Sky With Diamonds" by Scalding Lucy) Steven: We're in the Courtauld Galleries and we're looking at Lucus Cranach the Elder, Adam and Eve from 1526 and it's a pretty big Cranach. Beth: It is. I think we're used to seeing perhaps Cranachs that are smaller and on a more intimate scale, but I guess that sort of matches the grandeur and importance of the Biblical Adam and Eve story. Steven: So German paintings of this time, I think especially Cranach's, are so peculiar visually. The representation of the body, there a kind of stylization of nature and of the human body that I think strike many people as wonderfully awkward, but also elegant in a curious way. Beth: Both Adam and Eve look like they're in courtly poses or very carefully posed and elegantly standing there, but it also just happens to be in the perfect place for this little grapevine to grow up naturally and Steven: (laughs) Steven: Okay, so a little poetic [?], Beth: (laughs) Steven: Now that idea of the courtly is important because Cranach was actually very much a part of the Saxon court. Beth: And he was painting for the court and the upper classes at the time, but also, interestingly I think, kind of encouraging people to read his images not simply for their religious importance, but also looking at the details of things that they might recognize. These animals, if you were out hunting and you would see deer or sheep or pheasant, all these little animals ... Steven: They're almost didactic. They're almost illustrations of these animals and maybe becomes a kind of menagerie, a kind of excuse to enjoy this complexity of animal forms and type. Beth: Well, that's certainly also reflecting that all these animals would have been in the Garden of Eden. I also think it's interesting, as a little historical side note, Cranach not having seen a lion in his own life. He was known to use pattern books. He would look up pictures that were made for artists of, "Here's what a lion looks like if you ever need to put a lion in your painting." The little lion over on the right side of the painting looks kind of like a dog, but that's (laughs) a Saxon artist in Bavaria at the time not having access to real lions. Steven: Of course, many people would have relied on a painting like this to understand what a lion looked like [entermed] and might have been led astray a little bit. Beth: Yeah. Steven: Let's talk about just the central scene for just a moment because it's pretty wonderful. You have Eve who's at the point of literally handing Adam the forbidden fruit which we generally think of as an apple, and he looks a little reluctant. Beth: He does, like he's scratching his head, "Should I take this? Should I not?" which is a little bit out of the ordinary for how we see Adam depicted, I think. Steven: He looks a little bit the innocent here. In turn, Eve looks somewhat sinister. Beth: She has kind of a sly, sideways glance going on which does give her a womanly wile appearance. Steven: I think that's actually amplified by the hair which is pretty extraordinary. She's got these curls that radiate out almost like electricity, in a variety of different angles and makes her seem a little bit wild. Beth: And also kind of connects her to the foliage right behind her, so it's as though she's connected to the tree and the fruit of knowledge and all of this. Steven: The serpent, the symbol of evil, is paying attention to her. That kind of misogyny or that kind of attention or implication that Eve is the responsible party, is a fairly old tradition. Beth: And I think that's also emphasized by the fact that her left hand is still holding the branch of the tree while she offers Adam the fruit with her right. Steven: So the story itself is pretty wonderful. They eat the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge and know their nakedness. When God reveals Himself to them, they hide. Like a parent, God just simply asks the question, "Why are you hiding?" Of course the fact that they had eaten the forbidden fruit comes to light. What I find interesting relates back to something you said earlier which is that this is a more secular rendering that is in some ways less religious. If Cranach, the artist is actually thinking about the secular, thinking about knowledge itself as good, that is displaying these animals, displaying the foliage in a very particular way, giving as much visual information as he can, very much a characteristic of the Renaissance, then this notion of eating of the Tree of Knowledge is interesting in the way that that's folded in, that knowledge in an inherent good and he is a product of this original sin. Beth: Which definitely would have been, in a Renaissance context, something worth emphasizing because they were very interested in the pursuit of knowledge and including that in their paintings and giving a great amount of emphasis to all of the learning that they have done. Steven: But in this context, there's something slightly naughty then, about that knowledge that it is somehow linked to sin. Beth: Yes. Steven: And so it's an interesting kind of balance. Beth: It becomes a good subject I think, for that little play of the good and the evil connected with knowledge. Steven: What a great painting. (music) ("In The Sky With Diamonds" by Scalding Lucy)

Family

His first wife, Jeanne (married 1663), was the sister of the sculptors Gaspard and Balthazard Marsy,[2] and gave him a son, the better known Pierre Le Gros the Younger who worked almost entirely in Rome. Shortly after Jeanne's early death in 1668, he married in 1669 his second wife Marie, the daughter of the builder and architect Jean le Pautre and niece of the engraver Jean le Pautre.[3] With her, he had another son, Jean (1671-1745), who was to become a portrait painter.[4]

Life

Children with Mirror, 1685–86, Versailles, Park, Bassin du Midi

In Paris, Le Gros entered the workshop of Jacques Sarazin as a pupil and later close assistant. He was working on the large funeral monument for the heart of the prince de Condé in the 1650s and, after Sarazin's death in 1660, took on the responsibility to erect the monument in the chapelle St.-Ignace of the Jesuit church Saint-Paul-Saint-Louis, achieved in 1663 (later moved to the Musée Condé in Chantilly where it was installed in a different form). For the same chapel, he did some more figurative work in 1664 and again in 1677-78 (all destroyed).[1]

In 1663, Le Gros was made an associate ("agréé"), 1666 a member of the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture with his reception piece, a marble medaillon of St. Peter (1664–66, Church of Notre-Dame, Versailles), and in 1702 he became professor.

His lifelong work for the Bâtiments du Roi started in 1666 with payments for specific commissions; from 1674 to 1713 he additionally received an annual salary, and at some point was also given a studio in the Louvre Palace.[1]

His first works for the Gardens of Versailles, 1668–70, were six of the fourteen Marmousets (fountains with groups of children) of gilded lead along the Allée d'Eau, followed until 1680 by several more. Many of these were replaced by bronze replicas in 1688 while the originals were moved to Marly where they were later destroyed.[1] Le Gros' Putti Playing with a Lyre of 1672-73 are now in the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC.[5] He also produced Aesop and figures of animals from his fables, 1672–76, for the park's labyrinth.

On a more ambitious scale is the over lifesize marble figure L'Eau (Water) from 1675 to 1681 as part of the "Grande Commande". While following a sketch by Charles Le Brun, Le Gros was given plenty of freedom in working out details for himself (the original sculpture is today inside the palace, a copy is in the park). The same is true for his Vénus sortant du Bain (Venus stepping out of the Bath, 1685–89), loosely based on an antique sculpture, and Le Point du Jour (Daybreak, 1686–96) which follows a model by François Girardon. Other than in marble, he also worked in bronze on a life size scale with the groups of Nymphs and children for the Parterre d'Eau, 1685–86. He was also involved in the production of large decorative vases etc.[1]

Like all work for the king, the Porte Saint-Martin in Paris was a highly coordinated collaborative project. The design for the triumphal arch by Pierre Bullet left some enormous spandrels for history scenes in relief which were executed from 1675 to 1677 by Etienne Le Hongre, Martin Desjardins, Gaspard Marsy and Le Gros whose subject was the highly up to date episode The Capture of Limbourg, a historic event which only took place in 1675. Much of his other works in Paris was for the Dôme des Invalides, mostly architectural sculpture (1690-1701) and the relief Saint Louis Serving the Poor (1691–93).

Not much details are known about Le Gros' work in Saint-Cloud from 1706 to 1711 for the elector of Bavaria, Maximilian II Emanuel who found refuge there for a period of time. The four herm statues of the Seasons in the Louvre, attributed to Le Gros, might be connected to this campaign.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Gerhard Bissell, Le Gros, Pierre (1629), in: Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon, vol. 83, de Gruyter, Berlin 2014, ISBN 978-3-11-023188-5.
  2. ^ Thomas Hedin, The Sculpture of Gaspard and Balthazard Marsy, Columbia (University of Missouri Press) 1983.
  3. ^ This engraver Jean Le Pautre (born 1618) has been mistaken for Marie Le Pautre's father due to the fact that his brother, confusingly, is also called Jean Le Pautre (born 1622). See: François Souchal, French Sculptors of the 17th and 18th Centuries. The Reign of Louis XIV, vol. II, Oxford (Cassirer) 1981, Lepautre family tree in the endpapers.
  4. ^ Legros (Le Gros), Jean, in: Ulrich Thieme, Felix Becker (editors): Allgemeines Lexikon der Bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, XXII, E. A. Seemann, Leipzig 1928, p. 575.
  5. ^ In the NGA's listing wrongly called cherubs.

References

  • Souchal, François. French Sculptors of the 17th and 18th Centuries: The Reign of Louis XIV. 4 vols (supplement 1993). (London, Cassirer and Faber), 1977–93.
  • (National Gallery of Art), Sculpture: An Illustrated Catalogue 1994: 131

External links

Gallery

This page was last edited on 8 December 2022, at 08:04
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