
François I of France - Jean and
François Clouet (c.1535, oil on panel) (Louvre).
Jean (or Janet) Clouet (1480 - 1541) was a
miniaturist and
painter who worked in France during the
Renaissance. He was the father of
François Clouet.
Biography
Clouet was
allegedly born in Brussels
.
The authentic presence of this artist at the French court is first
mentioned in 1516, the second year of the reign of
Francis I. By a deed of gift made by the
king to the artist's son of his father's estate, which had
escheated to the crown, we learn that he was not actually a
Frenchman, and never naturalized. He is supposed to have been a
native of the
Low Countries, and
probably his real name was Clowet.
He lived several years in Tours
, and there
it was he met his wife, who was the daughter of a
jeweller.
He is recorded as living in Tours in 1522, and there is a reference
to his wife's residence in the same town in 1523. In that year
Clouet was awarded the position of
Groom of the Chamber by the King, with
a stipend at first of 180 livres and later of 240.
He and his wife were
certainly living in Paris
in 1529,
probably in the neighborhood of the parish of Ste Innoceth, in the
cemetery of whicn they were buried. He stood godfather at a
christening on
July 8,
1540, but was no longer living in December 1541.
His brother, known as Clouet de Navarre, was in the service of
Marguerite d'Angoulême, sister of Francis I, and is referred to in
a letter written by Marguerite about 1529. Jean Clouet had two
children,
François and
Catherine, who married Abel Foulon, and left one son, who continued
the profession of François Clouet after his decease.
Jean Clouet was undoubtedly a very skillful portrait painter,
although no work in existence has been proved to be his. He painted
a portrait of the mathematician
Oronce
Finé in 1530, when Fine was thirty-six years old, but the
portrait is now known only by a print.
Janet is generally
believed, however, to have been responsible for a very large number
of the wonderful portrait drawings now preserved at Chantilly, and at the Bibliothèque Nationale, and
to him is attributed the portrait of an unknown man at Hampton
Court, that of the dauphin Francis, son of Francis I at Antwerp,
and one other portrait, that of Francis I in the Louvre
.
Seven miniature portraits in the
Manuscript of the Gallic
War in the Bibliothèque Nationale (13,429) are attributed to
Janet with very strong probability, and to these may be added an
eighth in the collection of
J.
Pierpont Morgan, and representing
Charles I de Cossé, Maréchal
de Brissac, identical in its characteristics with the seven already
known. There are other miniatures in the collection of Mr Morgan,
which may be attributed to Jean Clouet with some strong degree of
probability, inasmuch as they closely resemble the portrait
drawings at Chantilly and in Paris which are taken to be his
work.
The collection of drawings preserved in France, and attributed to
this artist and his school, comprises portraits of all the
important persons of the time of Francis I. In one album of
drawings the portraits are annotated by the king himself, and his
merry reflections, stinging taunts or biting satires, add very
largely to a proper understanding of the life of his time and
court. Definite evidence, however, is still lacking to establish
the attribution of the best of these drawings and of certain oil
paintings to Jean Clouet.
References