Jean Duvet
Jean Duvet (1485 – after 1562) was a French Renaissance goldsmith and engraver, now best known for his engravings. He was the first significant French printmaker. He produced about seventy-three known plates, that convey a highly personal style, often compared to that of William Blake, with very crowded compositions, a certain naive quality, and intense religious feeling.[1] According to Henri Zerner, his work has a "freedom and immediacy that have no equivalent in Renaissance printmaking".[2] A degree of mystery surrounds his biography, as there is disagreement as to whether or not he was the Jean Duvet from Dijon who spent sixteen years in the militantly Calvinist city-state of Geneva.
Life
He was born to a Dijon goldsmith in 1485,[3] presumably in Dijon itself, which until a decade before had been part of the independent state of the Duchy of Burgundy. He became a master of the Dijon Goldsmiths' guild in 1509, and may have travelled to Italy in about 1519; this is purely an inference from his prints, which show considerable Italian influence. His first dated print is The Annunciation from 1520 (left), although others are probably earlier. A misunderstanding of the nature of a pilaster in this print, which shows a putto wrapped round one as though it were a thin sheet, unattached to the wall behind, perhaps suggests that his understanding of the Italian style was derived purely from prints, books and other objects brought back to France.[4] Although he remained in the provinces, he was appointed goldsmith to both Francis I and Henry II. The first of these appointments was on the occasion of the King's visit to Langres, where he was already living, in 1521; he had been involved in the decorations for the Royal Entry.[5] By the next royal visit, in 1533, he was in charge of the festivities and decoration. The influence of pageant tableaus and scenery has been detected in his prints. No identified examples of his goldsmithing survive, though commissions for Francis I and others are documented.[2]
He died, probably in Langres, after 1562, when he is recorded as attending a town meeting there,[6] though Zerner gives his death date as 1561 and Marqusee says that there is no specific documentation of Duvet after the last Geneva mention in 1556.[7] His last dated print is the Frontispiece of 1555. He was certainly dead by 1570,[2] but some authorities think he was alive until about then - 1570 is the death date given by the Getty Union Artist Names List for example.
Geneva theory
A Jean Duvet from Dijon is also recorded working as a goldsmith in Calvinist Geneva from 1540–56, but most scholarly opinion now believes that this was someone else, probably his nephew.[2] The question perhaps cannot be regarded as entirely settled. The Geneva Duvet was recorded as the son of "Loys Duvey, alias Drot de Dijon", probably Jean Duvet's brother, who became a Master in 1509. Eisler and Blunt favour the Geneva figure being Duvet himself, followed by Marqusee; Zerner and R. May do not. Yet another Jean Duvet, working as a goldsmith in Geneva, was condemned to death for extortion in Geneva in 1576.
The (earlier) Geneva Duvet is rather better documented, working for the city authorities in a number of capacities, and holding official office. Both Langres and Dijon were strongly Catholic centres during the period before the Wars of Religion, and Duvet is recorded in Langres as member of a militant Catholic lay fraternity founded in 1548.[8] If his religious views had changed, Langres might well have been an uncomfortable place to remain. The printer of the Apocalypse was Jean de Tournes; his son, also called Jean de Tournes, moved from Lyon to Geneva in 1585 to escape religious persecution.[9][10] No less than three Duvet engravings depict the Suicide of Judas, an exceptionally rare subject outside full cycles of the Passion of Christ, suggesting a "passionate interest in the subject", which may connect with personal religious struggles.[11] Eisler dates these three between 1527 and the end of Duvet's career.
On the other hand, it is hard to reconcile the Geneva theory with his appointment as goldsmith to Henry II, who reigned from 1547, and the three plates celebrating Henry and the "mystique of divine monarchy" in extravagant terms, which may celebrate the re-dedication of the Order of Saint Michael by Henry in 1548.[12]
Works
All seventy-three prints listed by Eisler are very rare - only seven copies of the Apocalypse with text are known, each with slightly different contents, although impressions of individual prints are commoner, and mostly earlier.[13] Some individual engravings survive only in unique impressions.[14] It is assumed that most of his prints in his characteristic crowded style and round-topped format date from the period 1540-55, based mainly on the 1555 date of the Apocalypse frontispiece. A few simpler but intense prints are usually taken to date from his last years, when his horror vacui, or inability to leave space unfilled, abated somewhat.[15]
He copied prints by Marcantonio and Mantegna, and his burin technique is especially indebted to the former. A very free copy of Mantegna's Entombment shows him imposing his own vision with complete confidence on the composition of another artist.[16]
The Apocalypse series
His most famous works are his series of twenty-three engravings on the Apocalypse, the frontispiece of which (above) is dated 1555. They borrow heavily from the famous series in woodcut of Albrecht Dürer (1498) but are very different in style - crowded, even confused, but urgent and intense. Eight of the series derive their composition in some way from Dürer.[17] This was published, with the accompanying text, in Lyon in 1561. Like many of his mature prints these use a round-topped shape. The frontispiece has the Latin inscriptions: "Jean Duvet goldsmith of Langres aged 70 made these histories 1555" (on the plate on the table) and "The Fates are pressing, already sight fails, the mind remains victorious, and the great work is completed" (by the swan), suggesting this was last of the series to be completed.[18]
The Unicorn and other works
His other famous work is his series of six prints on the unicorn, still very personal but more lyrical in style; until the nineteenth century he was known as the "Unicorn Master" after these. Series celebrating the French monarchy and Genesis were left aside after a few plates each.[19]
Style and Legacy
Duvet's work contrasts strongly with the sophisticated art produced at the court of Fontainebleau. In its religious mysticism and quasi-Gothic sensibility, it partly harks back to the Middle Ages.[20] Duvet's engraving known as Moses Surrounded by the Patriarchs (1540–50), for example, draws on a common medieval theme, the ancestors and antetypes of Christ.[20] The driving force of Duvet's composition is the visionary nature of his material, which inspires him to place symbolic expression ahead of considerations of proportion, scale, or space. He also illustrates his texts literally.[21] When St. John speaks of a voice "as if it were a trumpet", Duvet depicts a trumpet blasting into the saint's ear. The urgency and confidence of Duvet's vision triumph over his technical limitations.[21] As well as recalling the medieval past, Duvet's work also looks forward to the more agitated style of the art produced during the French Wars of Religion later in the sixteenth century.[22]
Duvet's work was produced, like that of Rosso and Pontormo in the Florence of the 1520s, in an urban atmosphere of religious excitement, since the town of Langres was in the grip of an enthusiastic and emotional Catholic revival at the time.[23] Duvet shares with those Florentine artists the style of distorted and crowded figures and borrowings from Dürer, though his use of Gothic elements is more pronounced. Some scholars have also compared Duvet's art to that of William Blake (1757–1827). Both were visionary artists with the "supreme confidence of the mystic"; both were in some ways technically incompetent.[24] They were also both inspired by medieval artists and by engravers of the High Renaissance and drew on Mannerist forms. Blake may have known of the earlier artist, since certain echoes of Duvet's work in Blake's seem more than coincidental.[25]
See also
Notes
- ↑ "inevitably compared" says Marqusee, 1976, p 14, "inescapable" says Blunt.
- 1 2 3 4 Grove Art Online (accessed October 5th, 2007)
- ↑ According to the inscription on the first plate of the Apocalypse series
- ↑ The Annunciation, Eisler no. 12; see Zerner (1994) p.211. Blunt however points out that one borrowing from Raphael reflects the original in Italy, rather than the several print copies of it, concluding that either Duvet saw the original, or an unknown drawing of it.
- ↑ Marqusee, 1976, p.8
- ↑ Becker p.99
- ↑ Marqusee, p.9
- ↑ Marqusee, 1976, p 8, Blunt:77
- ↑ Tournes ‹turn›, Jean de (o J. Detournes) (in Italian). Enciclopedie on line. Rome: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Accessed July 2013.
- ↑ Marqusee op cit p.8
- ↑ Zerner (1994), p.223-4 (also for the Eisler dates)
- ↑ Zerner (1994), p. 215. See also Edict of Châteaubriant for the increasingly anti-Huguenot climate of these years, and the role of Geneva as a centre for exiles.
- ↑ By the 1561 edition the plates are becoming worn. Zerner (1994), p. 216. Becker says there are 24 in the series, unlike Zerner and Marqusee. The last print in the Boston series, linked below, is not included in Marqusee.
- ↑ Becker p.99 n 5; Zerner (1994), p.215
- ↑ Zerner (1994), p.223-224
- ↑ Zerner (1994), p.212
- ↑ One of the closest is the illustration of St John eating the book in Chapter 10:Duvet and Dürer
- ↑ Zerner translations (1994), p.216.
- ↑ Three on the Monarchy; it is thought that The Marriage of Adam and Eve and Moses surrounded by the Patriarches were for a projected Genesis series. See Becker p.99; Zerner (1994), p.215
- 1 2 Blunt p.75.
- 1 2 Blunt p.76.
- ↑ Blunt p.77.
- ↑ Bishop Claude de Longwy, Cardinal de Givry, led a Catholic reform movement in the town. Duvet was a member of a devotional confraternity called the Holy Sacrament. Blunt p.77.
- ↑ Blunt p.77. Duvet is in thorough control of the engraving medium however. Weaknesses in his figure drawing are often similar to those of Blake.
- ↑ Blunt p.77, traces a possible route for this.
References
- Becker, David P (1993). Spangeberg, KL, ed. Six Centuries of Master Prints. Cincinnati Art Museum. ISBN 0-931537-15-0. nos 61 & 62.
- Blunt, Anthony (1953). Art and Architecture in France: 1500–1700 (1999 ed.). New Haven (CT): Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07748-3.
- Eisler, Colin T (1979). Master of the Unicorn, the life and work of Jean Duvet (2nd ed.). New York: Abaris Books. ISBN 9780913870464.
- Marqusee, Michael, ed. (1976). The Revelation of Saint John; Apocalypse Engravings by Jean Duvet. London: Paddington Press. ISBN 0-8467-0148-0.
- Zerner, Henri (1994). Jacobson, Karen, ed. The French Renaissance in Prints. Grunwald Center, UCLA. pp. 209–24 & 470. ISBN 0-9628162-2-1.
- Zerner, Henri. Jean Duvet, in Grove Art
External links
- Media related to Jean Duvet at Wikimedia Commons
- Works from Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Including the full Apocalypse series. Mid-sized .jpg files.
- Works from the British Museum. Including the full Apocalypse series and Unicorn series. Mid-sized .jpg files.
- Works from the Art Institute of Chicago
- Works from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Including the full Apocalypse series. Highly zoomable interface and big .jpg files.
- Works from the National Gallery of Art, Washington
- Works from Harvard Art Museums
- Works from European institutions at Europeana
- Lapocalypse figuree, par maistre Jehan Duvet. 1561. Retrieved 2014-01-26. Book copy from BnF
- JEAN Duvet drawing in the Louvre; Joconde
- Prints & People: A Social History of Printed Pictures, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Jean Duvet (see index)
- Popham, A. E. (1921). "Jean Duvet". The Print Collector's Quarterly 8 (2): 121–150.
- Ivins, William M., Jr. (1926-04-01). "Jean Duvet" (PDF). The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 21 (4): 18–22. ISSN 0026-1521. JSTOR 3254445. Retrieved 2013-12-25.
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