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  • Emmanuel Fillion

DO WE HAVE A DESTINY ?

Updated: Mar 28, 2021

If yes, is it defined from where we come from?…

As a young sculptor, I traveled throughout France working on many places. In some of them, I spent more time than others and would return many times to carve different ornaments that could take weeks to complete.


My journey took me to the Cathedral of Sens where I cleaned my first statue ( before i could carve them) laying under the Cathedral carpentry. I can still remember the smell of dust and old dry wood standing on top of the vaults.Then, a few years later, I spent many months working on one of the Sainte Chapelle’s tower in Vincennes.

Most of you would not know these places and how beautiful they are! Maybe you will go there when visiting France.

It was many years later that I discovered that my direct grandfather was Jean Cousin the Elder 14th generations ago.

Jean Cousin (1500 – before 1593) was a French painter, sculptor, etcher, engraver, and geometrician.Cousin was born at Soucy, near Sens, and began his career in his native town with the study of glass-painting under Jean Hympe and Grassot. At the same time, he studied mathematics and published a successful book on the subject. He also wrote on geometry in his student days. In 1530 Cousin finished the windows for Sens Cathedral, the subject chosen being the "Legend of St. Eutropius". He also painted the windows of many of the noble châteaux in and around the city.



The latest date on any of his Sens work, 1530, points to this as the year he went to Paris, where he began work as a goldsmith; but the amount and kind of his productions in the precious metals are alike unknown.In Paris Cousin continued his career as a glass-painter, and created his best-known work, the windows of the Sainte-Chapelle in Vincennes. He subsequently devoted himself to painting in oil, and has been claimed as the first Frenchman to use that new medium.



Pictures attributed to him, all of much merit, are found in several of the large European collections, but, excepting "The Last Judgment", none is known to be authentic. For a long time this work lay neglected in the sacristy of the church of the Minims, Vincennes, until it was rescued by a priest and transferred to the Louvre. It is said to be the first French picture to be engraved.He was also an illustrator of books, making many designs for woodcuts and often executed them himself. The "Bible", published in 1596 by Le Clerc, and the Metamorphoses and Epistles of Ovid(1566 and 1571 respectively) contain his most noted work as an illustrator. Cousin etched and engraved many plates after the manner of Parmigianino, to whom the invention of etching has been ascribed.


He also created sculptures, including, it is thought, the mausoleum of Admiral Philippe de Chabot. In addition to his early writings on mathematics, he published, in 1560, a treatise on perspective, and, in 1571, a work on portrait-painting.

During his life Cousin enjoyed the favor of and worked for four kings of France: Henry II, Francis II, Charles IX, and Henry III. Among his paintings, mention should also be made of the miniatures in the prayer book of Henry II now in the Bibliothèque Nationale; among his etchings and engravings, the Annunciation and the Conversion of St. Paul; among his woodcuts, the Entrée de Henry II et Catherine de Médicis à Rouen.



So here I am now, having a better understanding of the indescribable call for making sculptures, painting and did i tell you? stain glass! It only happened once but it was a fabulous experience. It took me to the http://www.domusdei.it/ in Roma many years ago. I was commissioned by John Paul Dejoria to make two stained glass windows for his home.

The Universe works wonders and we all are its tool.



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