Dictionary of Renaissance art

CLOUET, JEAN

(c. 1485-1540)
Painter active in the French court ofFrancis I. Clouet's biographical details are sketchy. He may have been born in Flanders and arrived in France at an early age. He is documented in 1516 as one of the artists serving the French king. By 1528, he was the court's chief painter. Only a handful of panel works by Clouet survive, mainly portraits and miniatures, though documents reveal that he also rendered somealtarpiecesin Tours, which have not been traced. Among the works attributable to him areMadame de Canaples(1525; Edinburgh, National Gallery of Scotland), theMan Holding Petrarch's Works(c. 1530; Windsor, Royal Collection), and the portraitFrancis I(c. 1525; Paris, Louvre), this last sometimes also attributed to his son,François Clouet. These works demonstrate that his style owes a debt to the Flemish school, particularly in the emphasis on the facial features and hands, the details of the costumes, and the half-length poses. A group of approximately 130 drawing portraits in charcoal or chalk in the Musée Conde, Chantilly, has also been attributed to Clouet. These record the likenesses of members of the French court and exhibit greater simplicity and realism than his panel portraits.

  1. clouet, jeanCLOUET Jean c. and Francois c. The Clouets father and son dominated the production of portraiture in drawing and painting in sixteenthcentury France. Probably influenced...Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620_ A Biographical Dictionary