STANFORD. CA.- The grandeur of French 16th-century art is on display at the
Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University in A Royal Renaissance: School of Fontainebleau Prints from the Kirk Edward Long Collection. The exhibition of more than 30 works continues through Bastille Day on July 14, 2013 and has been joined by other shows for a French Summer at the Cantor Art Center.
King François I of France returned to his realm in 1526, determined to triumph in matters of culture after suffering military defeat and imprisonment at the hands of the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. To achieve this cultural triumph, François I invited Rosso Fiorentino, Francesco Primaticcio and other esteemed Italian artists to his court. Their primary taskand the keystone to his cultural initiativeinvolved transforming his medieval hunting lodge at Fontainebleau into a showcase royal residence. Refining the mannerist idiom they brought from Italy, these artists evolved the School of Fontainebleau style in which elegance, eroticism, classical erudition and the grotesque are fused in a richly ornamental amalgam.
As part of the kings cultural policy, Antonio Fantuzzi, René Boyvin, Domenico del Barbiere, Léon Davent and others made engravings and etchings that recorded the multimedia ensembles embellishing the palace and related designs. Disseminated internationally, their prints publicized the cultural efflorescence François I had fostered. The works selected for this exhibition illustrate the sophistication and extravagance of this courtly style.
All the works on view come from a private collection that is a promised gift to the Cantor Arts Center. Bernard Barryte, curator of European Art at the Cantor, has been working with collector Kirk Edward Long for more than eight years to develop his pan-European collection of mannerist prints. A Royal Renaissance was developed by Sarah Grandin (2011, Comparative Literature and Art History) during her senior year at Stanford under Barrytes supervision.
Cantor visitors can also enjoy these exhibitions of French art:
Manet and the Graphic Arts in France, 18601880, June 12November 17; prints, drawings and photographs from the decades before and after the Paris Commune of 1871
Inspired by Temptation: Odilon Redon and Saint Anthony, July 3October 20; a rare look at this artists response to Flaubert's 1874 poem The Temptation of Saint Anthony
Storied Past: Four Centuries of French Drawings from the Blanton Museum of Art, 15001900, July 3September 22; 60 old master drawings in their only West Coast viewing