- Enguerrand Quarton
Enguerrand Quarton or Charonton (c. 1410 - c. 1466) was a French painter and manuscript illuminator whose few surviving works are among the first masterpieces of a distinctively French style, very different from either Italian or
Early Netherlandish painting . Six paintings by him are documented, of which only two survive, and in addition theLouvre now follows most art historians in giving him the famousAvignon Pietà . His two documented works are the remarkable "Coronation of the Virgin" (1453-54, Villeneuve-les-Avignon) and "The Virgin of Mercy" (1452, Musée Condé, Chantilly). Two smalleraltarpiece s are also attributed to him.Life and work
Quarton was born in the diocese of
Laon in northern France, but moved toProvence in 1444, possibly after working in the Netherlands. There he worked inAix-en-Provence ,Arles in 1446, andAvignon , where he was based from 1447 until his death there in about 1466. Provence at this time had some of the most impressive painters in France, to judge by surviving work at any rate, withNicholas Froment andBarthélemy d'Eyck , who both appear to have collaborated with Quarton; the North hadJean Fouquet however. All were influenced by both Italy and the Netherlands to varying degrees. ThePope s andAnti-Pope s were no longer living in Avignon, but it remained Papal territory, and the city contained many Italian merchants.Except for some banners, no works by Quarton for
René of Anjou , the ruler of most of Provence, are documented, although René was a keen patron of the arts who employed D'Eyck for many years and patronised several other artists. Many of Quarton's clients were important figures in René's court and administration, like the Chancellor of Provence who commissioned the "Missal of Jean des Martins" (BnF, Ms nouv. aq. latin. 2661).Although the influence of Quarton can be seen strongly in subsequent Provençal painting, and also in some works as far away as Germany and Italy, he was later almost wholly forgotten until the "Coronation of the Virgin" was exhibited in Paris in 1900, since when both awareness of his importance, and the number of works attributed to him, has steadily increased. The attribution to him of the Avignon Pietà has only been generally accepted since about the 1960s.
The "Virgin of Mercy"
This work, also known as the "Cadard Altarpiece" after the donor, uses a motif that is most often found in Italian art, and was developed by
Simone Martini a century earlier. The painting has the same plain gold background as the "Avignon Pietà", which by this date was unusual, although it also appears in what is now the best-known version of this theme, completed just a few years earlier byPiero della Francesca . The scale of the figures is hieratic; The Virgin andSaint John the Baptist andSaint John the Evangelist tower over the donor and his wife, who are themselves slightly larger than the faithful sheltered by the Virgin's robe. The contract of February 1452 specifies that both Quarton and Pierre Villate will work on the piece, but art historians have struggled to detect two hands in the works as it exists, although Dominique Thiébaut suggests some of the sheltering figures are weaker than the rest of the work, and by Villate. One possibility is that Villate was responsible for apredella now lost.A recently discovered document of 1466 orders some painted or
stained glass for the Town Hall of Arles from a "maître Enguibran" living in Avignon. He may have had help from Pierre Villate, who is documented as fulfilling many commissions for glass, and was also a party to the contract for the "Virgin of Mercy". Hardly any work certainly his survives, but it is clear he had a considerable reputation in his day. He was younger than Quarton, but already a master of the Guild in 1452.The "Coronation of the Virgin"
The contract for the "Coronation" specifies the unusual representation of the Father and Son of the
Holy Trinity as identical figures (very rare in the 15th century, though there are other examples), but allows Quarton to represent the Virgin as he chooses. Around the Trinity, blue and redangel s are deployed similar to those in Fouquet's "Melun diptych" (now Antwerp [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
] ). The depiction ofRome (left) andJerusalem (right) in the panoramic landscape below is also specified in the contract; the donor had been on apilgrimage that included both cities. Beneath thisPurgatory (left) andHell (right) open up, and in the centre the donor kneels before aCrucifixion . On the extreme left a church is shown in "cut-away" style, containing aMass of Saint Gregory . Quarton was given seventeen months from the contract date to deliver the painting bySeptember 29 1454 . As is usual, materials were carefully specified; elements of the language used appear to come from the dialect of Quarton's nativePicardy , suggesting much of the final draft was by him. The contract has been described as "the most detailed to survive for medieval European painting" [Dominique Thiébaut: "Enguerrand Quarton", Grove Art Online. Oxford University Press, October 5th, 2007, [http://www.groveart.com/] ]Like many of Quarton's landscape backgrounds, this depicts the Provençal landscape in a style derived from Italian painting, whilst his figures are more influenced by Netherlandish artists like
Robert Campin andJan van Eyck , but with a severity and elegance that is French alone, as is the geometrical boldness of his composition. His very strong colours have little shading, and his lighting is "harsh, even merciless". [Walther & Wolf, op cit p.360.] The landscape includes perhaps the first appearance in art ofMont Sainte-Victoire , later to be painted so often byCezanne and others. The painting remains in themonastery Chartreuse du Val de Bénédiction,Villeneuve-lès-Avignon , for which it was commissioned by a local clergyman, Jean de Montagny.The "Avignon Pieta"
The
Pietà , where the dead Christ is supported by his grieving mother, is one of the most common themes of late-medieval religious art, but this is one of the most striking depictions, "perhaps the greatest masterpiece produced in France in the 15th century." [Lucie-Smith, Edward;"A Concise History of French Painting", p26, Thames & Hudson, London, 1971.] The curved back form of Christ's body is highly original, and the stark, motionless dignity of the other figures is very different from Italian or Netherlandish depictions. Before the painting was generally attributed to Quarton, some art historians thought the painting might be by a Catalan or Portuguese master. The bare background landscape falls away to a horizon broken by the buildings of Jerusalem, but instead of a sky there is plain gold leaf with stamped and incised haloes, borders and inscriptions. The clerical donor, portrayed with Netherlandish realism, kneels to the left. The painting came fromVilleneuve-lès-Avignon , just across the Rhône from Avignon, and is sometimes known as the "Villeneuve Pietà".Illuminated manuscripts
A number of miniatures in illuminated manuscripts have been ascribed to Quarton, whose style has many distinctive features, in colouring, modelling and
iconography . François Avril of theBnF has been a significant figure in these attributions, the first of which was made in 1977. In 1444 a document relating to Quarton was witnessed by him and Barthélemy d'Eyck in Aix, and from around this period dates an unfinishedBook of Hours in theMorgan Library , on which they worked closely together, with some miniatures apparently drawn by d'Eyck and painted by Quarton, who also did others all by himself. Another Book of Hours, in theHuntington Library is rather later, but variable in quality. A large and sumptuousmissal in the BnF, dated 1466, with two full-page miniatures, three smaller, and manyhistoriated initial s, shows Quarton's fully-developed style, as do two large miniatures added to the famous earlier "Boucicaut Book of Hours" by Quarton, probably in the 1460s. Some miniatures of quality from a further Hours in Namur complete those currently attributed to him.References
*Walther, Ingo F. and Wolf, Norbert, "Masterpieces of Illumination"; pp 360-61; 2005, Taschen, Köln; ISBN 382284750X
*Main source: [http://www.enguerrandquarton.com/biographie/formation.html Enguerrand Quarton Online]External links
* [http://www.enguerrandquarton.com/biographie/formation.html Enguerrand Quarton Online - enthusiast's site, all in French but many excellent images (left side menu)]
* [http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/html/c/charonto/index.html Web Gallery of Art - good pictures of details]
* [http://www.sacred-destinations.com/france/villeneuve-chartreuse-val-de-benediction.htm Chartreuse du Val de Bénédiction, Villeneuve-lès-Avignon, home of the Coronation]
* [http://www.kikirpa.be/www2/fr/actu/2001/0110Quarton.htm The Namur manuscript, from the Koninklijk Instituut voor het Kunstpatrimonium, Brussels (in French)]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.