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The greatest French
sculptor of the 17th century. He worked mainly in his native
Marseille and in Toulon, for although he sought success at court, his
work was much too impassioned to fit into the scheme of
Le Brun's artistic
dictatorship. Morover, he was arrogant and headstrong in temperament and
he fell victim to the intrigues of fellow artists.
His Baroque
style was formed in Italy, where in 1640-43 he worked with
Pietro da Cortona
in Rome (Palazzo Barberini) and Florence (Palazzo Pitti). Subsequently
he made several journeys to Genoa, where he established a condsiderable
reputation. His first major work was a pair of atlas figures for the entrance
to Toulon Town Hall (1656) and in these he showed the physical vigour
and emotional intensity that were the hallmarks of his style. They occur
most memorably in his celebrated Milon of Crotona (Louvre, Paris, 1671-82),
which was one of his few works accepted for the palace at Versailles.
Puget spent
his final years embittered by his failures. He worked as a painter, architect,
and decorator of ships as well as a sculptor, and was an outstanding draughtsman.
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