Dictionary of Renaissance art

GOUJON, JEAN

(c. 1510-c. 1565)
Sculptor who dominated the field in 16th-century France. Goujon was deeply influenced by the Fontainebleau School established byRosso FiorentinoandFrancesco Primaticcio, as well as the art ofBenvenuto Cellini, who was active in France from 1540 until 1545. Goujon arrived in Paris in 1544, and there he worked in collaboration with the architect Pierre Lescot. HisPietà(1544-1545; Paris, Louvre), originally part of the rood screen in the Church of St. Germain l'Auxerrois, belongs to this period. The FontainebleauManneristvocabulary is clearly seen in this work, particularly in the use of elegant elongated forms. The deep emotional content of the work is typical of Rosso's art, and the thin, closely arranged folds stem from Cellini. Goujon would again collaborate with Lescot at the Louvre in the 1550s, rendering the caryatids in theSalle des Cariatidesand the sculptural decoration on the palace's west façade. Among Goujon's most celebrated works are thenymphsfrom theFountain of the Innocents(1547-1549; Paris, Louvre), no longer in situ. The fluid lines andclassicizedforms in thesereliefsagain recall the art of the Fontainebleau artists. By the early 1560s, nothing else is heard of Goujon. He is believed to have traveled toBolognaand to have died there in c. 1565.

  1. goujon, jeanc. Jean Goujon was the major force in sculpture particularly in relief in midsixteenthcentury France. His courtrelated commissions often executed in collaboration with ot...Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620_ A Biographical Dictionary