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Home arrow Travel France arrow General Informations about France arrow Travel France About the Beginning of Art in France








Travel France About the Beginning of Art in France

In the late Middle Ages, the itinerant life of the nobles led them to prefer small and transportable works of art; splendidly illuminated manuscripts were much praised and the best painters, usually trained in Paris, continued to work on a small scale until the fifteenth century. In spite of the small size of the illuminated image, painters made startling steps towards a realistic interpretation of the world and in the exploration of new subject matters.

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Many of these illuminators were also panel painters, foremost of whom was Jean Fouquet (c1420-1481), born in Tours in the Loire valley and the central artistic personality of fifteenth-century France. Court painter to Charles VIII, Fouquet drew from both Flemish and Italian sources, utilizing the new fluid oil technique that had been perfected in Flanders, and concerning himself with the problem of representing space convincingly, much like his Italian contemporaries. Through this he moulded a distinct personal style, combining richness of surface with broad, generalized forms and, in his feeling for volume and ordered geometric shapes, laying down principles that became intrinsic to French art for centuries to come, from Poussin to Seurat and Cézanne.

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Two other fifteenth-century French artists deserve brief mention here, principally for the broad range of artistic expression they embody. Enguerrand Quarton (c1410-c1466) was the most famous Provençal painter of the time; his art, profoundly religious in subject as well as feeling, already shows the impact of the Mediterranean sun in the strong light that pervades his paintings. His Pietà in the Louvre is both stark and intensely poignant, while the Coronation of the Virgin that hangs at Villeneuve-lès-Avignon is a vast panoramic vision not only of heaven but also of a very real earth, in what ranks as one of the first city/landscapes in the history of French painting: Avignon itself is faithfully depicted and the Mont Ste-Victoire, later to be made famous by Cézanne, is recognizable in the distance.

The Master of Moulins , active in the 1480s and 1490s, was noticeably more northern in temperament, painting both religious altarpieces and portraits commissioned by members of the royal family or the fast-increasing bourgeoisie.


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