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Jacques Le Moyne

Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues (c. 1533–1588) was a French artist and member of Jean Ribault's expedition to the New World. His depictions of Native American life and culture, colonial life, and plants are of extraordinary historical importance.

One of Theodor de Bry's engravings possibly based on Le Moyne's drawings, depicting Athore, son of the Timucuan king Saturiwa, showing Laudonnière the monument placed by Ribault.
Exploration of Florida by Ribault and Laudonniere, 1564, by Le Moyne de Morgues.
A Rose, a Heartsease, a Sweet Pea, a Garden Pea, and a Lax-flowered Orchid Metropolitan Museum of Art

Biography edit

Until well into the 20th century, knowledge of Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues was extremely limited, and largely confined to the footnotes of inaccessible ethnographic bibliographies, where he figures as the writer and illustrator of a short history of Laudonniere's attempt in 1564–5 to establish a Huguenot settlement in Florida. In 1922, however, Spencer Savage, librarian of the Linnean Society, made a discovery that opened the way to the subsequent definition of Le Moyne as an artistic personality; he recognized that a group of fifty-nine watercolors of plants contained in a small volume, purchased by the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1856 solely for its fine sixteenth-century French binding, were in fact by Le Moyne. Savage's publications relating to this discovery prepared the way for subsequent attribution to the artist of other important groups of drawings and watercolors, which form the core of his known oeuvre.

Early life edit

Le Moyne was born about 1533, in Dieppe, France, and died in London in 1588. The first thirty years of his life are undocumented, but it seems reasonable to suppose that he trained as an artist in his native town, which was at the time a notable center both for cartography and for illumination. Le Moyne probably worked at the court of King Charles IX of France, although there is no documentary record to that effect, nor are there any surviving works by the artist dating from before his departure for Florida in 1564.

Expedition to Florida edit

Le Moyne accompanied the French expedition of René Laudonnière in an ill-fated attempt to colonize northern Florida. They arrived at the St. Johns River in 1564, and soon founded Fort Caroline near present-day Jacksonville.[1] Painting in the Calvinist style, he is mostly known for his artistic depictions of the landscape, flora, fauna, and, most importantly, the inhabitants of the New World. His drawings of the cultures commonly referred to as the Timucua (known through their reproduction by the Belgian publisher Theodor de Bry) are largely regarded as some of the most accessible data about the cultures of the Southeastern Coastal United States; however, many of these depictions and maps are currently being questioned by historians and archaeologists as to their authenticity. During this expedition he became known as a cartographer and an illustrator as he painted landscapes and reliefs of the land they crossed.

Jean Ribault first explored the mouth of the St. Johns River in Florida in 1562 and erected a stone monument there before leading the party north and establishing an outpost of two dozen or so soldiers on Parris Island, South Carolina. He then sailed back to France for supplies and settlers. However, he was not able to reinforce the fort because while he had been gone, civil war had broken out in France. A truce in 1564 allowed Laudonniere to lead a new expedition, which founded Fort Caroline on the St. Johns Bluff in what is now Jacksonville. Many of the DeBry engravings depict the French fort and the local Saturiwa tribe, the Timucua group who lived at the mouth of the St. Johns in the area of Fort Caroline. Le Moyne also accompanied several inland expeditions from Ft. Caroline, and he made illustrations of many of the scenes he witnessed.

Laudonniere's expedition, though resulting in the production of the Le Moyne/de Bry publication and an important map of the coastal regions of Florida, was ultimately a disaster; the good relations initially established with the Indian tribes inhabiting the territories around the settlement site at St. Johns soon soured, in addition to which various members of the French party became disaffected, and revolted against their leaders.

The final coup de grâce came a year later, when a Spanish force from the Spanish colony of St. Augustine thirty miles to the south, attacked Laudonniere's stronghold at Fort Caroline. The Spanish, under the leadership of Pedro Menéndez de Avilés, stormed the colony and killed most of the Huguenots, though Laudonnière, Le Moyne and about two dozen others escaped and were eventually rescued to England. Having lost their way on the return, they sailed half starved into Swansea Bay, Wales in mid-November 1565, and finally reached Paris early in 1566.

Le Moyne's highly important account of this transatlantic voyage, known today from a Latin edition published in Frankfurt in 1591 by Theodore de Bry under the title 'Brevis narratio eorum quae in Florida Americai provincia Gallis acciderunt,' clearly indicates that it was the King who instructed the artist to accompany the expedition, headed by Jean Ribault and Rene Goulaine de Laudonniere, as official recording artist and cartographer. Although only one original drawing by Le Moyne of an American subject is known today—the depiction of 'Athore showing Laudonniere the Marker Column set up by Ribault,' executed in watercolor and gouache on vellum, now in the New York Public Library—the 'Brevis narratio,' published by de Bry as the second volume of his great series of publications on voyages to the New World, contains forty-two engraved illustrations and maps alleged to have been made on the spot by Le Moyne. The text by de Bry describes and analyses these images, and his book constitutes a major landmark in the literature of the early exploration of the Americas.

Later life edit

Le Moyne fled France after the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre of Huguenots in 1572, ultimately settling in England.[2] Le Moyne ended his career as a highly regarded botanical artist in Elizabethan London, where his patrons included Sir Walter Raleigh and Lady Mary Sidney.

Drawings and authenticity edit

All but one of Le Moyne's original drawings were reportedly destroyed in the Spanish attack on Fort Caroline; most of the images attributed to him are actually engravings created by the Belgian printer and publisher Theodor de Bry, which are based on recreations Le Moyne produced from memory. These reproductions, distributed by Le Moyne in printed volumes, are some of the earliest images of European colonization in the New World to be circulated. Le Moyne died in London in 1588, and his detailed account of the voyage, Brevis narratio eorum quae in Florida Americai provincia Gallis acciderunt, was published in 1591. A re-edition of his paintings including critical response has been published in 1977 by the British Museum.

The images of the Timucua and related maps, said to be based on Le Moyne's drawings by de Bry, have fallen under intense scrutiny and their legitimacy as works related to Le Moyne are considered very questionable. Jerald Milanich, author of books on the Timucua and an archaeologist at the Florida Museum of Natural History has published an article in which he questions whether Le Moyne produced drawings of the Timucua at all, based on the inexplicable lack of any definite documentation or evidence. The one existing painting believed to be by Le Moyne himself (owned by the New York Public Library) has been argued to be a replica of one of de Bry's etchings, rather than a source for it, by anthropologist and ethnohistorian Christian Feest.[3]

 
Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues (about 1533–1588, Apple (Malus pumila Millervar), 1568–1572, Watercolour and body colour on paper V&A Museum no. AM.3267Y-1856[4] Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Botanical paintings edit

The six documented works by the artist in private hands are exquisite gouaches which embody and combine in a most original manner three diverse artistic traditions: the first is that of manuscript illumination in Le Moyne's native France; the second is the recording of exotic and native flora, fauna and cultures, which was the artistic expression of the late sixteenth-century fascination with exploration and scientific investigation; and the third is the purely aesthetic love of flowers and gardens which was so apparent in Elizabethan court culture.[5] Le Moyne's work represents a transition from the medieval focus on the religious symbolism of plants in art to a Renaissance emphasis on scientific inquiry and beauty when creating botanical illustration.[6]

The most extravagant and exquisitely wrought of all Le Moyne's floral works are the six miniature-like gouaches from the Korner collection. Purchased as the work of an anonymous Netherlandish artist of circa 1600, their authorship was recognized by art historians Dr. Rosy Schilling and Mr. Paul Hutton, by comparison with the drawings by Le Moyne in the British Museum. These are generally similar in conception to the watercolors in the British Museum, and must also date from around 1585.[7] A number of his works are held in the Victoria and Albert Museum.[8]

Notes edit

  1. ^ (1997) The Encyclopedia of American Facts and Dates 10th Edition, Collins. ISBN 0-06-270192-4.
  2. ^ Hulton, Paul (1962). "An Album of Plant Drawings by Jacques le Moyne de Morgues". The British Museum Quarterly. 26 (1/2): 37–39. doi:10.2307/4422769. JSTOR 4422769.
  3. ^ See: Milanich, Jerald, "The Devil in the Details", Archaeology, May/June 2005.
  4. ^ "Apple (Malus pumila Millervar)". Prints & Books. Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
  5. ^ . Aradergalleries.com. Archived from the original on 2012-04-06. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  6. ^ "Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues | A Sheet of Studies of Flowers: A Rose, a Heartsease, a Sweet Pea, a Garden Pea, and a Lax-flowered Orchid | The Met". The Metropolitan Museum of Art, i.e. The Met Museum. Retrieved 2017-06-30.
  7. ^ "le moyne de morgues, ||| old master drawings ||| sotheby's l06040lot3cxknen". www.sothebys.com. Retrieved 2017-01-25.
  8. ^ Victoria & Albert search: Le Moyne de Morgues

References edit

  • Heller, Henry. (2002) Labour, Science and Technology in France, 1500-1620, Cambridge University Press. p. 79. ISBN 0-521-89380-1.
  • Jacques LeMoyne
  • Exploring Florida: Jacques Le Moyne: Images of the engravings
  • Milanich, Jerald, "The Devil in the Details", Archaeology, May/June 2005, pp. 27–31.
  • Hulton, Paul, (1977) The Work of Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues: A Huguenot Artist in France and Florida, 2 vol., British Museum Publications. ISBN 0-7141-0737-9
  • Harvey, Miles. (2008) Painter in a Savage Land: The Strange Saga of the First European Artist in North America, Random House. ISBN 978-1-4000-6120-4.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues at Wikimedia Commons
  • Gallica, la bibliothèque numérique (Bibliothèque nationale de France): Théodore de Bry, Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues and the Timucua Indians
  • from The Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Journal of Florida Literature
  • The written accounts and artwork of Le Moyne at Fort Caroline in 1564

jacques, moyne, french, canadian, soldier, jacques, moyne, sainte, hélène, morgues, 1533, 1588, french, artist, member, jean, ribault, expedition, world, depictions, native, american, life, culture, colonial, life, plants, extraordinary, historical, importance. For the French Canadian soldier see Jacques le Moyne de Sainte Helene Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues c 1533 1588 was a French artist and member of Jean Ribault s expedition to the New World His depictions of Native American life and culture colonial life and plants are of extraordinary historical importance One of Theodor de Bry s engravings possibly based on Le Moyne s drawings depicting Athore son of the Timucuan king Saturiwa showing Laudonniere the monument placed by Ribault Exploration of Florida by Ribault and Laudonniere 1564 by Le Moyne de Morgues A Rose a Heartsease a Sweet Pea a Garden Pea and a Lax flowered Orchid Metropolitan Museum of Art Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Expedition to Florida 1 3 Later life 2 Drawings and authenticity 3 Botanical paintings 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksBiography editUntil well into the 20th century knowledge of Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues was extremely limited and largely confined to the footnotes of inaccessible ethnographic bibliographies where he figures as the writer and illustrator of a short history of Laudonniere s attempt in 1564 5 to establish a Huguenot settlement in Florida In 1922 however Spencer Savage librarian of the Linnean Society made a discovery that opened the way to the subsequent definition of Le Moyne as an artistic personality he recognized that a group of fifty nine watercolors of plants contained in a small volume purchased by the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1856 solely for its fine sixteenth century French binding were in fact by Le Moyne Savage s publications relating to this discovery prepared the way for subsequent attribution to the artist of other important groups of drawings and watercolors which form the core of his known oeuvre Early life edit Le Moyne was born about 1533 in Dieppe France and died in London in 1588 The first thirty years of his life are undocumented but it seems reasonable to suppose that he trained as an artist in his native town which was at the time a notable center both for cartography and for illumination Le Moyne probably worked at the court of King Charles IX of France although there is no documentary record to that effect nor are there any surviving works by the artist dating from before his departure for Florida in 1564 Expedition to Florida edit Le Moyne accompanied the French expedition of Rene Laudonniere in an ill fated attempt to colonize northern Florida They arrived at the St Johns River in 1564 and soon founded Fort Caroline near present day Jacksonville 1 Painting in the Calvinist style he is mostly known for his artistic depictions of the landscape flora fauna and most importantly the inhabitants of the New World His drawings of the cultures commonly referred to as the Timucua known through their reproduction by the Belgian publisher Theodor de Bry are largely regarded as some of the most accessible data about the cultures of the Southeastern Coastal United States however many of these depictions and maps are currently being questioned by historians and archaeologists as to their authenticity During this expedition he became known as a cartographer and an illustrator as he painted landscapes and reliefs of the land they crossed Jean Ribault first explored the mouth of the St Johns River in Florida in 1562 and erected a stone monument there before leading the party north and establishing an outpost of two dozen or so soldiers on Parris Island South Carolina He then sailed back to France for supplies and settlers However he was not able to reinforce the fort because while he had been gone civil war had broken out in France A truce in 1564 allowed Laudonniere to lead a new expedition which founded Fort Caroline on the St Johns Bluff in what is now Jacksonville Many of the DeBry engravings depict the French fort and the local Saturiwa tribe the Timucua group who lived at the mouth of the St Johns in the area of Fort Caroline Le Moyne also accompanied several inland expeditions from Ft Caroline and he made illustrations of many of the scenes he witnessed Laudonniere s expedition though resulting in the production of the Le Moyne de Bry publication and an important map of the coastal regions of Florida was ultimately a disaster the good relations initially established with the Indian tribes inhabiting the territories around the settlement site at St Johns soon soured in addition to which various members of the French party became disaffected and revolted against their leaders The final coup de grace came a year later when a Spanish force from the Spanish colony of St Augustine thirty miles to the south attacked Laudonniere s stronghold at Fort Caroline The Spanish under the leadership of Pedro Menendez de Aviles stormed the colony and killed most of the Huguenots though Laudonniere Le Moyne and about two dozen others escaped and were eventually rescued to England Having lost their way on the return they sailed half starved into Swansea Bay Wales in mid November 1565 and finally reached Paris early in 1566 Le Moyne s highly important account of this transatlantic voyage known today from a Latin edition published in Frankfurt in 1591 by Theodore de Bry under the title Brevis narratio eorum quae in Florida Americai provincia Gallis acciderunt clearly indicates that it was the King who instructed the artist to accompany the expedition headed by Jean Ribault and Rene Goulaine de Laudonniere as official recording artist and cartographer Although only one original drawing by Le Moyne of an American subject is known today the depiction of Athore showing Laudonniere the Marker Column set up by Ribault executed in watercolor and gouache on vellum now in the New York Public Library the Brevis narratio published by de Bry as the second volume of his great series of publications on voyages to the New World contains forty two engraved illustrations and maps alleged to have been made on the spot by Le Moyne The text by de Bry describes and analyses these images and his book constitutes a major landmark in the literature of the early exploration of the Americas Later life edit Le Moyne fled France after the St Bartholomew s Day massacre of Huguenots in 1572 ultimately settling in England 2 Le Moyne ended his career as a highly regarded botanical artist in Elizabethan London where his patrons included Sir Walter Raleigh and Lady Mary Sidney Drawings and authenticity editAll but one of Le Moyne s original drawings were reportedly destroyed in the Spanish attack on Fort Caroline most of the images attributed to him are actually engravings created by the Belgian printer and publisher Theodor de Bry which are based on recreations Le Moyne produced from memory These reproductions distributed by Le Moyne in printed volumes are some of the earliest images of European colonization in the New World to be circulated Le Moyne died in London in 1588 and his detailed account of the voyage Brevis narratio eorum quae in Florida Americai provincia Gallis acciderunt was published in 1591 A re edition of his paintings including critical response has been published in 1977 by the British Museum The images of the Timucua and related maps said to be based on Le Moyne s drawings by de Bry have fallen under intense scrutiny and their legitimacy as works related to Le Moyne are considered very questionable Jerald Milanich author of books on the Timucua and an archaeologist at the Florida Museum of Natural History has published an article in which he questions whether Le Moyne produced drawings of the Timucua at all based on the inexplicable lack of any definite documentation or evidence The one existing painting believed to be by Le Moyne himself owned by the New York Public Library has been argued to be a replica of one of de Bry s etchings rather than a source for it by anthropologist and ethnohistorian Christian Feest 3 nbsp Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues about 1533 1588 Apple Malus pumila Millervar 1568 1572 Watercolour and body colour on paper V amp A Museum no AM 3267Y 1856 4 Victoria and Albert Museum LondonBotanical paintings editThe six documented works by the artist in private hands are exquisite gouaches which embody and combine in a most original manner three diverse artistic traditions the first is that of manuscript illumination in Le Moyne s native France the second is the recording of exotic and native flora fauna and cultures which was the artistic expression of the late sixteenth century fascination with exploration and scientific investigation and the third is the purely aesthetic love of flowers and gardens which was so apparent in Elizabethan court culture 5 Le Moyne s work represents a transition from the medieval focus on the religious symbolism of plants in art to a Renaissance emphasis on scientific inquiry and beauty when creating botanical illustration 6 The most extravagant and exquisitely wrought of all Le Moyne s floral works are the six miniature like gouaches from the Korner collection Purchased as the work of an anonymous Netherlandish artist of circa 1600 their authorship was recognized by art historians Dr Rosy Schilling and Mr Paul Hutton by comparison with the drawings by Le Moyne in the British Museum These are generally similar in conception to the watercolors in the British Museum and must also date from around 1585 7 A number of his works are held in the Victoria and Albert Museum 8 Notes edit 1997 The Encyclopedia of American Facts and Dates 10th Edition Collins ISBN 0 06 270192 4 Hulton Paul 1962 An Album of Plant Drawings by Jacques le Moyne de Morgues The British Museum Quarterly 26 1 2 37 39 doi 10 2307 4422769 JSTOR 4422769 See Milanich Jerald The Devil in the Details Archaeology May June 2005 Apple Malus pumila Millervar Prints amp Books Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 2007 10 20 Lemoyne De Morgues Jacques Aradergalleries com Archived from the original on 2012 04 06 Retrieved 2012 11 18 Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues A Sheet of Studies of Flowers A Rose a Heartsease a Sweet Pea a Garden Pea and a Lax flowered Orchid The Met The Metropolitan Museum of Art i e The Met Museum Retrieved 2017 06 30 le moyne de morgues old master drawings sotheby s l06040lot3cxknen www sothebys com Retrieved 2017 01 25 Victoria amp Albert search Le Moyne de MorguesReferences editHeller Henry 2002 Labour Science and Technology in France 1500 1620 Cambridge University Press p 79 ISBN 0 521 89380 1 Jacques LeMoyne Exploring Florida Jacques Le Moyne Images of the engravings Milanich Jerald The Devil in the Details Archaeology May June 2005 pp 27 31 Hulton Paul 1977 The Work of Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues A Huguenot Artist in France and Florida 2 vol British Museum Publications ISBN 0 7141 0737 9 Harvey Miles 2008 Painter in a Savage Land The Strange Saga of the First European Artist in North America Random House ISBN 978 1 4000 6120 4 External links edit nbsp Media related to Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues at Wikimedia Commons Gallica la bibliotheque numerique Bibliotheque nationale de France Theodore de Bry Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues and the Timucua Indians Artfact Robert Viking O Brien s article on LeMoyne s Brevis narratio fromThe Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Journal of Florida Literature Le Moyne s Florida Indians The written accounts and artwork of Le Moyne at Fort Caroline in 1564 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacques Le Moyne amp oldid 1220335015, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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