Mannerism and Italian Influence
At the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, the French invasion of Italy brought both artists and patrons into closer contact with the Italian Renaissance. The most famous of the artists who were lured to France was Leonardo da Vinci , spending the last three years of his life (1516-19) at the court of Francois I. From the Loire valley, which until then had been his favourite residence, the French king moved nearer to Paris, where he had several palaces decorated. Italian artists were once again called upon, and two of them, Rosso and Primaticcio , who arrived in France in 1530 and 1532 respectively, were to shape the artistic scene in France for the rest of the sixteenth century. Both artists introduced to France the latest Italian style, Mannerism , a sometimes anarchic derivation of the High Renaissance of Michelangelo and Raphael. Mannerism, with its emphasis on the fantastic, the luxurious and the large-scale decorative, was eminently compatible with the taste of the court, and it was first put to the test in the revamping of the old Chateau de Fontainebleau. There, a horde of French painters headed by the two Italians came to form what was subsequently called the School of Fontainebleau . Most French artists worked at Fontainebleau at some point in their career, or were influenced by its homogeneous style, but none stands out as a personality of any stature, and for the most part the painting of the time was dull and fanciful in the extreme. Antoine Caron (c1520-c1600), who often worked for Catherine de Medicis, the widow of Henri II, contrived complicated allegorical paintings in which elongated figures are arranged within wide, theatre-like scenery packed with ancient monuments and Roman statues. Even the Wars of Religion, raging in the 1550s and 1560s, failed to rouse French artists' sense of drama, and representations of the many massacres then going on were detached and fussy in tone. Portraiture tended to be more inventive. The portraits of Jean Clouet (c1485-1541) and his son Francois (c1510-72), both official painters to Francois I, combined sensitivity in the rendering of the sitter's features with a keen sense of abstract design in the arrangement of the figure, conveying with great clarity social status and giving clues to the sitter's profession. Though influenced by sixteenth-century Italian and Flemish portraits, their work remains, nonetheless, very French in its general sobriety.
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