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Pierre Lescot

 
Biography: Pierre Lescot

The French architect Pierre Lescot (c. 1500-1578) was one of the creators of the French classical style of architecture.

Pierre Lescot was probably born in Paris of a family sufficiently prosperous to provide him with an education in the liberal arts, for the poet Pierre de Ronsard, a fellow courtier, recorded that Lescot had a natural talent for painting and that he had studied mathematics and architecture. There are no records of Lescot's activity before 1544 and after 1559. Though less a practitioner of architecture and more a theorist and decorator than Philibert de l'Orme, Lescot emerged as a talented amateur whose esthetic influence at court in the last years of the reign of Francis I (1515-1547) and throughout the reign of Henry II (1547-1559) was greatly enhanced through his collaboration in implementing new classical concepts with the sculptor architect Jean Goujon.

Lescot's major surviving monument is the Cour Carrée (Square Court, 1546-1551) of the Louvre Palace in Paris. Works attributed to Lescot, in collaboration with Goujon, are the Hôtel Carnavalet (c. 1545-1550) in Paris, subsequently altered three times; the Fountain of the Innocents (1547-1549) in Paris, now totally reconstructed; and the fragmentary château of Vallery.

In the south facade of the Cour Carrée, Lescot employed classical elements entirely new to France at the time. Since Lescot is known to have gone on an official mission to Rome only in 1556, after the completion of all works associated with his name, and since there is no sign of his having absorbed the fundamental monumentality of Roman architecture of the High Renaissance by Donato Bramante or Antonio da Sangallo the Younger, one may deduce that Lescot's awareness of classical architecture came rather from studying the writings of the Roman architect Vitruvius (1st century B.C.) and from Roman ruins on French soil. One is confronted in the Louvre facade by a screen of inherent, lingering Gothic verticality, though symmetrical and sagely balanced horizontally, instead of the fundamentally three-dimensional or blocklike Roman esthetic. The even placement of the three pavilion bays like towers and the pitched roof contribute to the soaring height reminiscent of French medieval fortresses. The variety of fenestration, the flickering surface animation resulting from Goujon's relief sculpture, and the use of the most elaborate orders, the Corinthian and Composite, are decidely un-Roman applications of classical precepts.

Nothing is known of Lescot after the death of Henry II in 1559, though the architect lived another 19 years.

Further Reading

Among the many scholars who have attempted to resuscitate the corpus of Lescot's life and works, Anthony Blunt renders the most succinct and reasonable account of Lescot in his Art and Architecture in France, 1500-1700 (1954; 2d ed. 1970).

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Architecture and Landscaping: Pierre Lescot
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(c.1500/10–78)

French architect, possibly of Scots descent, credited with introducing Renaissance Classicism to France. He collaborated with the sculptor/architect Jean Goujon (c.1510–c.1568) for nearly 20 years. One of their earliest works is the Fontaine des Innocents, Paris (1547–9), wholly rebuilt (1788) and re-worked by Legrand and others. He also collaborated with Jean Bullant at the Hôtel de Ligneris (now Carnavalet— c.1545–50). Lescot was appointed in 1546 to design part of the Louvre, and he was responsible for the south-western corner of the Square Court there (1546–51, with Goujon), with façades of great refinement, lacking the monumental quality of Italian work, but introducing a delicate ornamental quality that was peculiarly French. However, Goujon may have been responsible for the entire architectural embellishments of the Louvre façades, with Lescot primarily in charge of the planning and disposition of the main elements.

Bibliography

  • Androuet du Cerceau (1972)
  • Blunt (1982)
  • Colombier (1949)
  • Hautecœur (1943)
  • Jane Turner (1996)
  • van Vynckt (ed.) (1993)

The full bibliography for this book is available to download as a pdf file.
Download the bibliography for A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (PDF: 1.2MB)

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Pierre Lescot
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Lescot, Pierre (pyĕr lĕskō'), c.1510-1578, French Renaissance architect. Appointed by Francis I to design a new royal palace in Paris, he built the earliest portions of what was later to become the vast palace of the Louvre. In this, as in other known works, the fine sculptural decorations were executed by Jean Goujon. To Lescot is attributed the original design of the Hôtel Carnavalet in Paris, later altered by François Mansart. His work is marked by the correct use of classical detail. Instead of following the monumental style of the Italians, Lescot created a more decorative interpretation of antiquity, distinguishing himself as one of the founders of the French tradition of classicism.
Wikipedia: Pierre Lescot
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Pierre Lescot (c. 1510 – September 1578[1]) was a French architect active during the French Renaissance, "the man who was first responsible for the implantation of pure and correct classical architecture in France."[2] He was born in Paris.

King Francis I of France took him into his service, and appointed him architect in charge of the building projects at the Palais du Louvre,[3] which transformed the old château into the palace that we know. A project put forward by the Italian architect and theorist Sebastiano Serlio was set aside in favor of Lescot's, in which three sides of a square court were to be enclosed by splendid apartments, while on the east, facing the city as it then was, the fourth side was probably destined to be lightly closed with an arcade. Festive corner pavilions of commanding height and adorned by pillars and statues were to replace the medieval towers. Elsewhere in the Louvre, little was actually achieved beyond razing some of the old feudal structure.

Though Lescot was confirmed in his position after the king's death by his heir Henry II, and though he worked at the Louvre project until his death, only the west side and part of the south side were completed, comprising the present southwest wing of the Cour Carré, the Aile Lescot, or "Lescot Wing". [1]. The building executed in 1546–51 set the mold of French classicism: it is of two stories with an attic richly embellished with Jean Goujon's panels of bas-reliefs; it is crowned by a sloping roof, a traditional feature of French building and practical in a rainy climate. The deeply recessed arch-headed windows of the ground story give the impression of an arcade, while the projecting pavilions bear small round oeil de boeuf windows above them. In the second storey slender fluted pilasters separate the windows, which alternate delicate triangular and arched pediments. Goujon's noble sculpture and architectural ornaments are cleverly subordinated to the construction, but the surviving groundfloor Salle des Caryatides (1546–49) is named for Goujon's four caryatid figures that support the musicians' gallery. Of Lescot's constructions at the Louvre there also remain the Salle des Gardes and the Henry II staircase.

Lescot's Fontaine des nymphes 1549, rededicated as Fontaine des innocents

His first achievements (1540–45) were the rood-screen in Saint-Germain l'Auxerrois, of which only some sculptures by Goujon have been saved and in Paris the Hôtel de Ligneris (1548–50, now the Musée Carnavalet, which was thoroughly altered by François Mansart). Here and especially in the design of the Fountain of Nymphs (1547–49, illustration, left), his moderate tectonic role is outshone by Goujon's sculpture.[4] He was also responsible for the Château de Vallery.

Lescot's career is so scantily documented it is not known whether he ever visited Italy, or whether his knowledge of Italian practice was derived through the architecture and engravings that issued from the School of Fontainebleau. All of Lescot's known works have sculptural decoration by Trebatti and by Jean Goujon, who collaborated with him at the Louvre. Unlike the other architects of the French Flamboyant Gothic and Renaissance, Pierre Lescot was not from a line of masons, with practical experience, but the son of a seigneur. His father, also Pierre Lescot, was sieur of Lissy-en-Brie and Clagny, not far from Versailles, seigneuries that his son Pierre inherited. Although, according to a eulogistic poem by Ronsard,[5] Pierre Lescot busied himself zealously in early youth making drawings and paintings, and, after his twentieth year, with mathematics and architecture, his wealth and the duties of his offices appear subsequently to have interfered with his artistic activity. No other documented works are identified, though a dismissive reference in the memoires of the duc de Nevers, published long afterwards, instances "Magny" (i.e. Clagny) as "a painter who used to make inventions of masquerades and tourneys",[6] as all court architects were expected to produce in the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries.

At his death, Lescot was succeeded at the Louvre by Jean Baptiste Androuet du Cerceau.

See also the other outstanding architects of the French Renaissance:

Notes

  1. ^ Adolphe Berty, "Pierre Lescot et sa famille" Gazette des Beaux-Arts 6 (1860) pp 340-48 offered the scant details of Lescot's life.
  2. ^ David Thomson, "A Note on Pierre Lescot, the Painter" The Burlington Magazine 120 No. 907 (October 1978, pp. 666-667) p 666; see Henri Zerner, L'art de la Renaissance en France. L'invention du classicisme (Paris: Flammarion) 1996. Lescot is much less known as a painter, though Thomson identifies a remark of Jean Bodin that placed one of the sieur de Clagny's paintings in the royal collection at "Fontaine Beleau".
  3. ^ The contract is of 1551. The project is analyzed in the context of Parisian urbanism in David Thomson, Renaissance Paris: Architecture and Growth, 1475-1600 (Berkeley: University of California Press) 1984, figs. 60-70.
  4. ^ The Fontaine des nymphes replaced an ancioent public fountain for the entry of Henry II into Paris, 1549.It stood against a wall; when it was rearranged in 1788 as a free-standing fountain, Augustin Pajou sculpted a fourth face. (Insecula).
  5. ^ Ronsard's poem, Discours à Pierre Lescot, was written in 1555 and subsequently modified (Thomson 1978:667).
  6. ^ "un Peintre qui souloit faire des inventions pour les masquerades & tournois nommé Magny, resident à Paris...", noted in Thomson 1978:667 and note.

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Architecture and Landscaping. A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. Copyright © 1999, 2006 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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