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Pierre Puget

Pierre Paul Puget (16 October 1620 – 2 December 1694) was a French Baroque painter, sculptor, architect and engineer. His sculpture expressed emotion, pathos and drama, setting it apart from the more classical and academic sculpture of the Style Louis XIV.[1]

Pierre Puget
Pierre Paul Puget, by his son François Puget
Born(1620-10-16)16 October 1620
Died2 December 1694(1694-12-02) (aged 74)
Marseille
NationalityFrench
Known forSculpture, painting, architecture
MovementBaroque style

Biography

Pierre Paul Puget was born on 16 October 1620 at the home of his father, a stone mason, in the working-class neighborhood of Panier, in Marseille.[2] As his two older brothers were trained as stone masons, he was trained as a woodcarver. He began his career at the age of fourteen, carving the elaborate wooden ornament of the galleys built in the Marseille shipyards. He also showed talent as a painter.[3]

Italy

In 1640, at the age of eighteen, taking his tools with him, he departed Marseille by sea to Livorno, Italy and then to Florence in search of an atelier which would employ him as a carver or painter. He carved some decorative panels in Florence, and then, with a good recommendation from his employer, and samples of his paintings, he went to Rome and presented himself to the painter Pietro da Cortona, one of the early masters of the Baroque style.[4] He assisted Da Cortona in painting of the lavish ceilings of the Palazzo Barberini in Rome and the Palazzo Pitti at Florence.[5]

Marseille and Toulon

After three years with da Cortona in Rome, he returned to Marseille, bringing with him the decorative tastes of the Italian Baroque. In Livorno he had made drawings of the highly-ornamented baroque decoration of Tuscan galleys and warships, as well as designs of imaginary ships painted by Cortona for his ceilings. He showed these to Jean Armand de Maillé-Brézé, Grand Admiral of the French fleet, and was given a commission to design a carved medallion for the stern of a new French warship, named for the Queen, Anne of Austria.[6]

The death of the Grand Admiral in 1646 ended his first work in naval decoration. He began painting, mostly religious works, in the style of Annibale Carracci and Rubens. He also received a commission in 1649 to make several public fountains for new squares in Toulon. In 1652 he was commissioned to make baptismal fonts for the Marseille cathedral. From 1662 to 1665 he made a series of paintings for the Cathedral of Marseille.[7]

He was recognized as a painter but still poorly paid; In 1653 he was commissioned by the Brotherhood of Corpus Domini to make two large paintings, The Baptism of Clovis and the Baptism of Constantine (now in the Marseille Museum of Art), for a total of one hundred forty livres, a very small amount for the time and amount of the work. He completed another religious painting, Salvator Mundi, in December 1655. Altogether he is recorded as having painted fifty-six paintings, of which nineteen were documented in 1868 as still existing. A serious illness in 1665 and advice of doctors caused him to abandon painting entirely.[8]

In 1650, he was living in Toulon, and was married there. He turned his attention entirely to sculpture. In 1655 he received his first important commission for the sculptural decoration of the entrance of the town hall of Toulon; he produced a porch supported by muscular atlantes, still in existence on a new municipal building facing the port. He used as his models two of the muscular workers who unloaded ships along the quay in front of the building. Their faces and postures in the sculpture vividly expressed their struggle with the weight on their shoulders.[9] The work was finished in 1657. He was paid fifteen hundred livres, to which the city authorities, pleased with the work, added a supplement of two hundred livres. His work was widely praised, and terra-cotta copies were made and circulated. Puget was converted from a modestly-talented painter to a celebrated sculptor.[8][5]

Vaux-le-Vicomte and Genoa

His reputation spread beyond Provence; he was invited to Paris and received a commission from a nobleman named Girardin for two statues, one representing Hercules and the other the Earth and Janus, for a chateau in Normandy. He completed them in Paris in July 1660.[10] He then received an even more important commission from Nicolas Fouquet, the King's Minister of Finance, to make sculpture for Fouquet's new garden at Vaux-le-Vicomte, including a statue of Hercules, the personal symbol of Fouquet. These statues were to be made of marble, which was very expensive and rarely used in Paris at the time. Fouquet sent Puget to Genoa, in Italy, to personally select and bring back the blocks of the best marble [11] While he was preparing his voyage, he received several proposals for sculptural projects from Jean-Baptiste Colbert, the secretary to Cardinal Mazarin, the prime minister, but he refused them, due to his obligations to Fouquet. Colbert did not forget this slight.[12]

In 1660 Fouquet travelled to the quarries of Carrara marble, where he selected the marble he wanted, chose a Genoese sailor as the model, and in Genoa made the statue that became known as the Hercules of Gaul. However, on 5 September 1661, Fouquet was arrested and imprisoned, on the accusations of Colbert, for taking government funds for his own use. The statue commissioned for Fouquet's garden was later sent instead to the Château de Sceaux, Colbert's more modest residence. It is now in the Louvre.[12]

Puget decided to stay for a time in Italy, making long visits to Rome and Genoa. His principal patron in Italy was an Italian nobleman, Francesco Maria Sauli. His major works during this period were two monumental statues for the pillars of the church of Santa Maria di Carignano, representing Saint Sebastian and Bishop Alexander Paoli. They were completed in 1663, and showed the influence of Bernini. [13] He also made a notable statue, The Immaculate Conception, for the French patron Emmanuel Brignole, for the chapel of an Albergo in Genoa. The Genoese senate proposed that he paint their council chamber, but he declined, to devote all his attention to sculpture.[12]

Toulon and Marseille - naval architecture

He returned to France in 1669 and divided his time between Toulon and Marseille. He was offered the position chief of decoration for French warships, but before accepting he sent a list of his demands to Colbert; among others, he insisted on being considered an officer, not a worker; and to have final authority for designs, over that of the King's official artists, the painter Charles Le Brun and the royal sculptor François Girardon. This was entirely unacceptable to Colbert. Colbert gave Girardon, not Puget, the commission to decorate the Royal Louis, the major new warship of the French fleet. The French fleet needed new ships, and Puget was charged with decorating, ten new men-of-war, as well as designing elegant new building for the headquarters of the fleet.[14]

Puget continued to work on other sculptural and artistic projects in Toulon, He sculpted a large marble group of the Virgin and Child for the church of Lorgues and created a monumental wooden retable still in place, for Toulon Cathedral. In addition, he designed town houses in Aix-en-Provence and several municipal buildings in Marseille, including the fish market (still in place) and the La Vieille Charité, originally a home for beggars and the indigent, now a cultural center.[13]

Puget's view of naval architecture soon clashed with the views of the new Commissioner of Fortifications, the Chevalier de Clairville. Clairville changed all of the Puget's plans, removed decoration he considered unnecessary, and rejected his elegant new headquarters building. Puget appealed to Colbert, but Colbert sided with Clairville. At the end of 1669, Puget took a leave of absence and departed the dockyards for his traditional sanctuary, Genoa, where he made a series of works, including The Virgin (1670), now in the oratory of the Church of Saint Philippe de Néri.[15]

When he returned to the dockyards in June 1670, he found they were commanded by a new officer, and that the decoration of ships he had begun had been given to others. He also learned that, upon the instructions of Colbert, any work he did had to be approved at higher levels by Le Brun and the senior sculptors in Paris. He was to design only what he was told to design. Furthermore, Colbert presented a new argument; British ships had little or no sculptural decoration, and they usually won battles. Therefore French ships should also be without sculpture.[16][17]

Marseille, architecture and urban design

In 1672, having no further work at the Naval Arsenal, Puget returned to his birthplace, Marseille. His first project was a new urban square and street, the Cours Saint-Louis, and rue Canabière. It took much of its inspiration from the urban planning and architecture of Genoa, and resembled on a small scale the later urban projects of Baron Haussmann and Napoleon III in Paris.[18] He also created an ornate sculptural plaque with the coast of arms of the King to decorate the facade of the Hotel de Ville. He designed a new fish market, completed in 1672, which is still in use, and La Vieille Charité, begun in 1679, originally a home for beggars and the indigent, now a cultural center. In addition, he designed town houses in Aix-en-Provence, including the Hotel d'Aiguilles (1675), a baroque mansion.[13]

Versailles - Milon of Croton

Puget had still not broken into the exclusive group of sculptors who were receiving royal commissions for the statuary of the new gardens of Versailles. He still possessed several blocks of fine marble from Genoa, In 1671 he sent to Colbert designs for two large-scale statues, Milon of Croton (now in the Louvre) and the bas-relief Alexander and Diogenes (1685, now in the Louvre). Colbert disliked Puget's personality but admired his skill; on 13 May 1672, he offered Puget a commission to make the two statues.[19] Puget was occupied with his tasks for the city of Marseille, and did not begin work until In 1672. The impatient Colbert wrote to Puget, demanding a report on the statue, and observing that the marble belonged not to Puget, but to the royal government. Puguet worked furiously on Milon. However, in 1681, six years after sending the designs, the statue was still not finished; it was finally completed in August, 1682.

Puget's Milon of Croton (1682) is a monumental work, nearly three meters high, is one of his most dramatic and expressive works. Illustrating a story by Ovid, it depicts the moment when Milon de Croton, a celebrated warrior but now elderly and weak, is attacked by a lion. His expression at the moment the lion claws Milon's is distorted by pain, and is full of pathos.[13] This work was satisfactory to Colbert, was purchased by the royal government, and given a prominent place in the Gardens of Versailles.[20] Puget in the meantime had begun on another monumental statue for Versailles, of Andromeda.[19]

Colbert died the following year and was replaced by as superintendent of royal buildings by François-Michel le Tellier, Marquis de Louvois. A month after Colbert's death, Louvois wrote to Puget for a report on other works that Puget was making, and asking how old he was. Puget responded that he was sixty years old and that he was working with great enthusiasm on his monumental statue of Perseus Andromeda (completed 1684, now in the Louvre) and the bas-relief Alexander and Diogenes (completed 1685, the Louvre). "I was raised making great works..." Puget wrote to Louvois. "The marble trembles before me, no matter how large it is." The two works were completed, loaded on ships in Toulon, and were placed in the gardens of Versailles.[21]

Marseille and the Louis XIV statue

In 1665 he proposed an even more ambitious commission, to design a new city square next to the port of Marseille, with, as the centerpiece, a monumental equestrian statue of Louis XIV, facing the harbor. Similar monuments had been constructed in Paris, in Place Vendôme and Place des Victoires. Puget designed both the statue and the architecture of the square, which was actually an oval, surrounded by a majestic marble colonnade, to complement the statue. The only question was money; the royal government expected the city of Marseille to finance the project.[22]

Puget made one of his rare trips to Versailles to promote the project in person to the King, on 29 November 1687. The King expressed his admiration of the project, as did his consort, Madame de Maintenon; but the soon-to-be chief royal architect, Jules Hardouin-Mansart, pointed out that it would be more attractive and efficient to build a square, rather than an oval, and a more modest project. Mansart himself had designed both Place Vendome and Place des Victoires, and his views were accepted by the King, much to the distress and anger of Puget. Work went ahead on the project, following the new plan. The marble was delivered for the statue, and Puget's friends in Genoa sent a magnificent horse to serve as a model. Puget remained adamant and declared he would not make the statue until the city square, in an oval shape, was constructed for it. The Echevins, or city council, decided they preferred the simpler and less expensive square design, but Puget was adamant.

Puget made another trip to Versailles to try to persuade the King to accept his project, but the King declined to see him. The Echevins of Marseille abandoned Puget and selected a different and little-known sculptor, Clérion, and Puget was excluded from the project. In the end, neither the square nor the statue was made; the outbreak of a war with Holland in 1688 ended for a time any new architectural projects.[23]

The last two works of Puget were the bas-reliefs Alexander and Diogenes and The Plague of Marseille. The last work, depicting a tragic but heroic moment in the city's history, was left unfinished. After his death, it was placed in the Council Chamber of the city of Marseille, where he died in 1694.

In 1882, Adolphe-André Porée discovered a lost statue by Puget on a castle grounds at Biéville-Beuville. He sculpted a large marble group of the Virgin and Child for the church of Lorgues and created a monumental wooden retable still in place, for Toulon Cathedral. Hydra of Lerna was originally in the castle of Vaudreuil, and is now at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen.[24]

Mont Puget, near Marseille, is named after him.

Death

Puget died in Marseille on 2 December 1694, at the age of seventy-four. He was buried in the cemetery of the church of the Convent of the Observance. The church and the cemetery have disappeared, and there is no marker to show where his remains are buried.[25]

Sculpture

Paintings

Notes and Citations

  1. ^ Geese Uwa, article on baroque sculpture in Tolman, Art Baroque: Architecture, Sculpture, Painting (2015), p. 303
  2. ^ See Georges Reynaud, « Origine et jeunesse marseillaise de Pierre Puget », in Revue Marseille, No. 177, juin 1966, p. 77. Earlier sources, such as Lagrange, give his birthdate as October 31 and his birthplace as the small village called Séon near Marseille.
  3. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 2.
  4. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 12.
  5. ^ a b Geese 2015, p. 303.
  6. ^ Lagrange 1868, pp. 16–17.
  7. ^ Lagrange 1868, pp. 24–25.
  8. ^ a b Lagrange 1868, pp. 24–30.
  9. ^ Lagrange 1868, pp. 50.
  10. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 59.
  11. ^ Lagrange 1868, pp. 59–60.
  12. ^ a b c Lagrange 1868, p. 61.
  13. ^ a b c d Geese 2015, p. 304.
  14. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 121.
  15. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 127.
  16. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 132.
  17. ^ G. Walton, "Les Dessins d'architecture de Puget pour la reconstruction de l'arsenal de Toulon", Information d'histoire de l'Art, 10 (1965), pp.162 ff
  18. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 167.
  19. ^ a b Lagrange 1868, p. 182.
  20. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 194.
  21. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 198.
  22. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 230.
  23. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 267-269.
  24. ^ French Regional & American Museum Exchange (FRAME) (2010-06-19). . Archived from the original on 2011-07-26.
  25. ^ Lagrange 1868, p. 329.

Bibliography

  • Lagrange, Léon (1868). Pierre Puget - Peintre - Sculpteur - Décorateur de Vaisseaux (in French). Paris: Didier et Cie. - includes a catalog of his works
  • Geese, Uwe (2015). "Section on Baroque sculpture". L'Art Baroque - Architecture - Sculpture - Peinture (in French). Cologne: H.F. Ulmann. ISBN 978-3-8480-0856-8.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Puget, Pierre". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 637.
  • See also Charles Ginoux, Annales de la vie de P. Puget (Paris, 1894); Philippe Auquier, Pierre Puget ... biographie critique (Paris, 1903).
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Pierre Puget" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

See also

External links

  • The life of Pierre Puget on NotreProvence.fr
  • in American public collections, on the French Sculpture Census website  

pierre, puget, pierre, paul, puget, october, 1620, december, 1694, french, baroque, painter, sculptor, architect, engineer, sculpture, expressed, emotion, pathos, drama, setting, apart, from, more, classical, academic, sculpture, style, louis, pierre, paul, pu. Pierre Paul Puget 16 October 1620 2 December 1694 was a French Baroque painter sculptor architect and engineer His sculpture expressed emotion pathos and drama setting it apart from the more classical and academic sculpture of the Style Louis XIV 1 Pierre PugetPierre Paul Puget by his son Francois PugetBorn 1620 10 16 16 October 1620MarseilleDied2 December 1694 1694 12 02 aged 74 MarseilleNationalityFrenchKnown forSculpture painting architectureMovementBaroque style Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Italy 1 2 Marseille and Toulon 1 3 Vaux le Vicomte and Genoa 1 4 Toulon and Marseille naval architecture 1 5 Marseille architecture and urban design 1 6 Versailles Milon of Croton 1 7 Marseille and the Louis XIV statue 2 Death 3 Sculpture 4 Paintings 5 Notes and Citations 6 Bibliography 7 See also 8 External linksBiography EditPierre Paul Puget was born on 16 October 1620 at the home of his father a stone mason in the working class neighborhood of Panier in Marseille 2 As his two older brothers were trained as stone masons he was trained as a woodcarver He began his career at the age of fourteen carving the elaborate wooden ornament of the galleys built in the Marseille shipyards He also showed talent as a painter 3 Italy Edit In 1640 at the age of eighteen taking his tools with him he departed Marseille by sea to Livorno Italy and then to Florence in search of an atelier which would employ him as a carver or painter He carved some decorative panels in Florence and then with a good recommendation from his employer and samples of his paintings he went to Rome and presented himself to the painter Pietro da Cortona one of the early masters of the Baroque style 4 He assisted Da Cortona in painting of the lavish ceilings of the Palazzo Barberini in Rome and the Palazzo Pitti at Florence 5 Marseille and Toulon Edit After three years with da Cortona in Rome he returned to Marseille bringing with him the decorative tastes of the Italian Baroque In Livorno he had made drawings of the highly ornamented baroque decoration of Tuscan galleys and warships as well as designs of imaginary ships painted by Cortona for his ceilings He showed these to Jean Armand de Maille Breze Grand Admiral of the French fleet and was given a commission to design a carved medallion for the stern of a new French warship named for the Queen Anne of Austria 6 The death of the Grand Admiral in 1646 ended his first work in naval decoration He began painting mostly religious works in the style of Annibale Carracci and Rubens He also received a commission in 1649 to make several public fountains for new squares in Toulon In 1652 he was commissioned to make baptismal fonts for the Marseille cathedral From 1662 to 1665 he made a series of paintings for the Cathedral of Marseille 7 He was recognized as a painter but still poorly paid In 1653 he was commissioned by the Brotherhood of Corpus Domini to make two large paintings The Baptism of Clovis and the Baptism of Constantine now in the Marseille Museum of Art for a total of one hundred forty livres a very small amount for the time and amount of the work He completed another religious painting Salvator Mundi in December 1655 Altogether he is recorded as having painted fifty six paintings of which nineteen were documented in 1868 as still existing A serious illness in 1665 and advice of doctors caused him to abandon painting entirely 8 In 1650 he was living in Toulon and was married there He turned his attention entirely to sculpture In 1655 he received his first important commission for the sculptural decoration of the entrance of the town hall of Toulon he produced a porch supported by muscular atlantes still in existence on a new municipal building facing the port He used as his models two of the muscular workers who unloaded ships along the quay in front of the building Their faces and postures in the sculpture vividly expressed their struggle with the weight on their shoulders 9 The work was finished in 1657 He was paid fifteen hundred livres to which the city authorities pleased with the work added a supplement of two hundred livres His work was widely praised and terra cotta copies were made and circulated Puget was converted from a modestly talented painter to a celebrated sculptor 8 5 Saint Cecile 1651 Museum of Fine Arts Marseille Baptism of Constantine 1653 Commissioned for Marseille Cathedreal now in Museum of Fine Arts Marseille Atlantes on the portal of the City Hall Port of Toulon 1657 Detail of an atlas on the City Hall on the Port of Toulon 1657 Vaux le Vicomte and Genoa Edit His reputation spread beyond Provence he was invited to Paris and received a commission from a nobleman named Girardin for two statues one representing Hercules and the other the Earth and Janus for a chateau in Normandy He completed them in Paris in July 1660 10 He then received an even more important commission from Nicolas Fouquet the King s Minister of Finance to make sculpture for Fouquet s new garden at Vaux le Vicomte including a statue of Hercules the personal symbol of Fouquet These statues were to be made of marble which was very expensive and rarely used in Paris at the time Fouquet sent Puget to Genoa in Italy to personally select and bring back the blocks of the best marble 11 While he was preparing his voyage he received several proposals for sculptural projects from Jean Baptiste Colbert the secretary to Cardinal Mazarin the prime minister but he refused them due to his obligations to Fouquet Colbert did not forget this slight 12 In 1660 Fouquet travelled to the quarries of Carrara marble where he selected the marble he wanted chose a Genoese sailor as the model and in Genoa made the statue that became known as the Hercules of Gaul However on 5 September 1661 Fouquet was arrested and imprisoned on the accusations of Colbert for taking government funds for his own use The statue commissioned for Fouquet s garden was later sent instead to the Chateau de Sceaux Colbert s more modest residence It is now in the Louvre 12 Puget decided to stay for a time in Italy making long visits to Rome and Genoa His principal patron in Italy was an Italian nobleman Francesco Maria Sauli His major works during this period were two monumental statues for the pillars of the church of Santa Maria di Carignano representing Saint Sebastian and Bishop Alexander Paoli They were completed in 1663 and showed the influence of Bernini 13 He also made a notable statue The Immaculate Conception for the French patron Emmanuel Brignole for the chapel of an Albergo in Genoa The Genoese senate proposed that he paint their council chamber but he declined to devote all his attention to sculpture 12 The Hercules of Gaul originally made for Fouquet the Louvre Saint Sebastian at Santa Maria Assunta Genoa 1668 Saint Alexander Sauli 1668 Toulon and Marseille naval architecture Edit He returned to France in 1669 and divided his time between Toulon and Marseille He was offered the position chief of decoration for French warships but before accepting he sent a list of his demands to Colbert among others he insisted on being considered an officer not a worker and to have final authority for designs over that of the King s official artists the painter Charles Le Brun and the royal sculptor Francois Girardon This was entirely unacceptable to Colbert Colbert gave Girardon not Puget the commission to decorate the Royal Louis the major new warship of the French fleet The French fleet needed new ships and Puget was charged with decorating ten new men of war as well as designing elegant new building for the headquarters of the fleet 14 Puget continued to work on other sculptural and artistic projects in Toulon He sculpted a large marble group of the Virgin and Child for the church of Lorgues and created a monumental wooden retable still in place for Toulon Cathedral In addition he designed town houses in Aix en Provence and several municipal buildings in Marseille including the fish market still in place and the La Vieille Charite originally a home for beggars and the indigent now a cultural center 13 Puget s view of naval architecture soon clashed with the views of the new Commissioner of Fortifications the Chevalier de Clairville Clairville changed all of the Puget s plans removed decoration he considered unnecessary and rejected his elegant new headquarters building Puget appealed to Colbert but Colbert sided with Clairville At the end of 1669 Puget took a leave of absence and departed the dockyards for his traditional sanctuary Genoa where he made a series of works including The Virgin 1670 now in the oratory of the Church of Saint Philippe de Neri 15 When he returned to the dockyards in June 1670 he found they were commanded by a new officer and that the decoration of ships he had begun had been given to others He also learned that upon the instructions of Colbert any work he did had to be approved at higher levels by Le Brun and the senior sculptors in Paris He was to design only what he was told to design Furthermore Colbert presented a new argument British ships had little or no sculptural decoration and they usually won battles Therefore French ships should also be without sculpture 16 17 Drawing by Puget of the warship Royal Louis showing his sculptural decoration on the stern Design for decoration of a warshipMarseille architecture and urban design Edit In 1672 having no further work at the Naval Arsenal Puget returned to his birthplace Marseille His first project was a new urban square and street the Cours Saint Louis and rue Canabiere It took much of its inspiration from the urban planning and architecture of Genoa and resembled on a small scale the later urban projects of Baron Haussmann and Napoleon III in Paris 18 He also created an ornate sculptural plaque with the coast of arms of the King to decorate the facade of the Hotel de Ville He designed a new fish market completed in 1672 which is still in use and La Vieille Charite begun in 1679 originally a home for beggars and the indigent now a cultural center In addition he designed town houses in Aix en Provence including the Hotel d Aiguilles 1675 a baroque mansion 13 Vielle Charite in Marseille home for indigent and beggars begun 1671 Vielle Charite in Marseille begun 1671 The Hall Puget or fish market in MarseilleVersailles Milon of Croton Edit Puget had still not broken into the exclusive group of sculptors who were receiving royal commissions for the statuary of the new gardens of Versailles He still possessed several blocks of fine marble from Genoa In 1671 he sent to Colbert designs for two large scale statues Milon of Croton now in the Louvre and the bas relief Alexander and Diogenes 1685 now in the Louvre Colbert disliked Puget s personality but admired his skill on 13 May 1672 he offered Puget a commission to make the two statues 19 Puget was occupied with his tasks for the city of Marseille and did not begin work until In 1672 The impatient Colbert wrote to Puget demanding a report on the statue and observing that the marble belonged not to Puget but to the royal government Puguet worked furiously on Milon However in 1681 six years after sending the designs the statue was still not finished it was finally completed in August 1682 Puget s Milon of Croton 1682 is a monumental work nearly three meters high is one of his most dramatic and expressive works Illustrating a story by Ovid it depicts the moment when Milon de Croton a celebrated warrior but now elderly and weak is attacked by a lion His expression at the moment the lion claws Milon s is distorted by pain and is full of pathos 13 This work was satisfactory to Colbert was purchased by the royal government and given a prominent place in the Gardens of Versailles 20 Puget in the meantime had begun on another monumental statue for Versailles of Andromeda 19 Colbert died the following year and was replaced by as superintendent of royal buildings by Francois Michel le Tellier Marquis de Louvois A month after Colbert s death Louvois wrote to Puget for a report on other works that Puget was making and asking how old he was Puget responded that he was sixty years old and that he was working with great enthusiasm on his monumental statue of Perseus Andromeda completed 1684 now in the Louvre and the bas relief Alexander and Diogenes completed 1685 the Louvre I was raised making great works Puget wrote to Louvois The marble trembles before me no matter how large it is The two works were completed loaded on ships in Toulon and were placed in the gardens of Versailles 21 Milo of Croton the Louvre Perseus and Andromeda the Louvre sculpted plaque of Diogenes and Alexander the Great the Louvre 1692 Marseille and the Louis XIV statue Edit In 1665 he proposed an even more ambitious commission to design a new city square next to the port of Marseille with as the centerpiece a monumental equestrian statue of Louis XIV facing the harbor Similar monuments had been constructed in Paris in Place Vendome and Place des Victoires Puget designed both the statue and the architecture of the square which was actually an oval surrounded by a majestic marble colonnade to complement the statue The only question was money the royal government expected the city of Marseille to finance the project 22 Puget made one of his rare trips to Versailles to promote the project in person to the King on 29 November 1687 The King expressed his admiration of the project as did his consort Madame de Maintenon but the soon to be chief royal architect Jules Hardouin Mansart pointed out that it would be more attractive and efficient to build a square rather than an oval and a more modest project Mansart himself had designed both Place Vendome and Place des Victoires and his views were accepted by the King much to the distress and anger of Puget Work went ahead on the project following the new plan The marble was delivered for the statue and Puget s friends in Genoa sent a magnificent horse to serve as a model Puget remained adamant and declared he would not make the statue until the city square in an oval shape was constructed for it The Echevins or city council decided they preferred the simpler and less expensive square design but Puget was adamant Puget made another trip to Versailles to try to persuade the King to accept his project but the King declined to see him The Echevins of Marseille abandoned Puget and selected a different and little known sculptor Clerion and Puget was excluded from the project In the end neither the square nor the statue was made the outbreak of a war with Holland in 1688 ended for a time any new architectural projects 23 The last two works of Puget were the bas reliefs Alexander and Diogenes and The Plague of Marseille The last work depicting a tragic but heroic moment in the city s history was left unfinished After his death it was placed in the Council Chamber of the city of Marseille where he died in 1694 In 1882 Adolphe Andre Poree discovered a lost statue by Puget on a castle grounds at Bieville Beuville He sculpted a large marble group of the Virgin and Child for the church of Lorgues and created a monumental wooden retable still in place for Toulon Cathedral Hydra of Lerna was originally in the castle of Vaudreuil and is now at the Musee des Beaux Arts de Rouen 24 Mont Puget near Marseille is named after him Death EditPuget died in Marseille on 2 December 1694 at the age of seventy four He was buried in the cemetery of the church of the Convent of the Observance The church and the cemetery have disappeared and there is no marker to show where his remains are buried 25 Sculpture Edit Head of Christ by Puget Marseilles Brooklyn Museum Archives Goodyear Archival Collection Assumption of the Virgin Bode Museum Berlin RetableToulon Cathedral The plague of Milan bas relief his last and uncompleted work Louis XIV medallion in marblePaintings Edit Sleep of the infant Jesus late 17th century Museum of Fine Arts Marseille Notes and Citations Edit Geese Uwa article on baroque sculpture in Tolman Art Baroque Architecture Sculpture Painting 2015 p 303 See Georges Reynaud Origine et jeunesse marseillaise de Pierre Puget in Revue Marseille No 177 juin 1966 p 77 Earlier sources such as Lagrange give his birthdate as October 31 and his birthplace as the small village called Seon near Marseille Lagrange 1868 p 2 Lagrange 1868 p 12 a b Geese 2015 p 303 Lagrange 1868 pp 16 17 Lagrange 1868 pp 24 25 a b Lagrange 1868 pp 24 30 Lagrange 1868 pp 50 Lagrange 1868 p 59 Lagrange 1868 pp 59 60 a b c Lagrange 1868 p 61 a b c d Geese 2015 p 304 Lagrange 1868 p 121 Lagrange 1868 p 127 Lagrange 1868 p 132 G Walton Les Dessins d architecture de Puget pour la reconstruction de l arsenal de Toulon Information d histoire de l Art 10 1965 pp 162 ff Lagrange 1868 p 167 a b Lagrange 1868 p 182 Lagrange 1868 p 194 Lagrange 1868 p 198 Lagrange 1868 p 230 Lagrange 1868 p 267 269 French Regional amp American Museum Exchange FRAME 2010 06 19 Hercule terrassant l hydre de Lerne 1659 1660 Archived from the original on 2011 07 26 Lagrange 1868 p 329 Bibliography EditLagrange Leon 1868 Pierre Puget Peintre Sculpteur Decorateur de Vaisseaux in French Paris Didier et Cie includes a catalog of his works Geese Uwe 2015 Section on Baroque sculpture L Art Baroque Architecture Sculpture Peinture in French Cologne H F Ulmann ISBN 978 3 8480 0856 8 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Puget Pierre Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 637 See also Charles Ginoux Annales de la vie de P Puget Paris 1894 Philippe Auquier Pierre Puget biographie critique Paris 1903 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Pierre Puget Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company See also EditFrench sculpture Baroque sculptureExternal links EditThe life of Pierre Puget on NotreProvence fr Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pierre Puget Pierre Puget in American public collections on the French Sculpture Census website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pierre Puget amp oldid 1133132544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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