List of the works of Bastien and Henry Prigent


List of works of Bastien and Henry Prigent.
The sculptors or "Ymageurs", Bastien and Henry Prigent ran a workshop in Landerneau, Brittany, France from 1527 to 1577 and records show that at least fifty parishes passed orders to them, these parishes spread across the dioceses of Léon and Cornouaille plus of course Plougonven in Trégor. The atelier is known for the work on the monumental calvaries of Pleyben and Plougonven, on the porches at Pencran, Landivisiau, Guipavas and Lampaul-Guimiliau, several crosses and smaller calvaries and a gisant. For much of their work they used Kersantite, The listing below gives details of these works.

The monumental calvaries

The Prigent atelier worked on the monumental calvaries at Plougonven see Calvary at Plougonven and Pleyben see Calvary at Pleyben. The Plougonven calvary was the first work to be inscribed with their names. An inscription reads "BASTIEN ET HENRY PRIGENT ESTOIET YMAGEURS 1554". The word "Ymageurs" was the description used for sculptors in this period in France. The Plougonven calvary is dedicated to Saint Yves and that at Pleyben to Saint Germain. The sculptor working in the Prigent atelier known as "Le compagnon de Pleyben" assisted the Prigents on parts of the Playben calvary.

The porches at Landivisau, Guivapas, Lampaul-Guimiliau and Pencran

The Prigent atelier are attributed with work on the great porches at Landivisiau, Guivapas, Lampaul-Guimiliau and Pencran. They also completed work on the porches at Le Tréhou, Trémaouézan, Commana, Ploudiry and Quéménéven. Details are:-

The porch at Landivisiau

The present Saint Thuriau church in Landivisiau was built between 1864 and 1865 replacing the earlier 16th-century building but the old church's porch and bell-tower were retained, fortunately so as they are both magnificent. The porch was dismantled and then re-erected in 1728 by Jean Perrot and Sébastien Roussel. The entrance to the porch comprises a semi-circular arch, with side buttresses and above the arch a pointed gable culminates in an elaborate lantern. Inside the porch are statues of the apostles, and a two-door entrance to the church has further decorated arches, with further statues on the wall as well as a tympanum. Unusually for porches in churches in the Élorn valley, the porch is accessed using ten steps. As at Pencran, Bastien Prigent created a series of piédroits and voussures depicting biblical and other scenes as decoration of the arch over the porch's entrance and grapes and a series of statuettes in niches, these depicting Saint Yves, Saint Peter holding a book and a key, Saint Salomon the Breton king wearing armour, holding a sword and the royal crown, Saint Miliau carrying his head in his hands, Saint Thivisiau, a bishop, Saint Côme holding a vase containing medications, Saint Damien, and another bishop giving a blessing. On the left side angels hold a cartouche reading "ANNO.DOMINI.1554" and on the right the cartouche reads "LAN.MIL.VCC.L1111.FVST.FONDE.CESTE.PORTAL.ET.ESTOIENT.LORS.FABRIQVES.Y.MARTN.J.ABGRALL". Above the doors a tympanum depicts angels holding phylacteries on either side of a statue of Jesus Christ. The phylactery held by the three angels on the left side reads "MEMENTO.MEI/O.MATER.DEI/PAX VOBIS" and that held by three angels on the right reads "DOMVS MEA/SALVATOR MVNDI/ LETVS MARIA". There is an elaborate stoup on the wall between the two entrance doors.

The porch at Guipavas

There was a reference to a church in Guipavas in as early as 1394 and the building was restored in 1563 and 1565. Hit by incendiary bombs in 1944 in the Allied push to take Brest from the occupying Germans, the church was subsequently rebuilt but there was enough left of the 1563 north porch to retain it and it has some sculptures and carvings attributed to the Prigent atelier including statues of the apostles and Jesus Christ in the porch interior, although eight of them were all decapitated during the turmoil of the 1789 French revolution, part of a nativity scene in the tympanum above the entrance arch and seven angels in the archivolt. The church was given the status of a parish church in 1618. The bell- tower was struck by lightning and destroyed in 1791 The north porch of the église Saint-Pierre et Saint-Paul has a three centred arch or "basket handle arch" and was made using the local Kersantite. The arch is decorated with carvings of leaves and grapes which emerge from the mouths of a dog on one side and a dragon on the other. In the tympanum above the door is what is left of a nativity scene; the heads of an ass and a cow poke out from the stable. The buttresses contain contemporary sculptures of Joseph and the Virgin Mary. In the voussures of the archivolt all that remain are seven angels either at prayer, swinging a censer, playing a musical instrument or holding phylacteries. These are by Henry Prigent as are the statue of Christ and the apostles in the porch interior.
Note: At the Chapelle Saint-Yves in Guipavas there is a statue of Saint Yves attributed to the Prigent atelier. It is located on the east wall to the left of the stained glass window.

The porch at Lampaul-Guimiliau

See also Lampaul-Guimiliau Parish close. The works at the Église Notre Dame porch attributed to the Prigent atelier are limited to the upper section of that porch. They are the statue of Saint Paul-Aurélien in a niche on the outside of the porch, a Saint Michel fighting a dragon situated below this niche and also the sculpture depicting the Virgin Mary and John the Evangelist at prayer with a small angel positioned between them on the top of the porch lantern. The sculptures depicting Saint Pol and Saint Michael are attributed to Bastien Prigent and those of the Virgin Mary, John the Evangelist and the angel are by Henry Prigent.

The porch at Pencran

The porch's entrance arch is of the "basket handle" type and the external voussure immediately around the rim of the arch is decorated with vine leaves and grapes and small carvings of people eating grapes or at play and some dogs and a bird. These carvings start on the left side emerging from the mouth of a lion and end on the right side entering the mouth of a dragon. Around the interior voussure the same themes are repeated but a pig replaces the dragon. Above this arch a large tympanum contains what is left of a nativity scene with the Virgin Mary and Joseph, who have lost their heads, on either side of the baby Jesus, and the protruding heads of the ass and the cow. Around the central arch of the entrance, a further two bands of voussures and piédroits are elaborately decorated with scenes from both Old and New Testament. The piédroit is the stone at the bottom part of an arch up to the point when the arch begins to curve. The stones in the curved part of the arch are called voussures. The nine biblical scenes involves are thought to have been inspired by the Maître de Folgoët's porch at La Martyre. They start on the lower left side with the temptation of Eve, and we then move over to the right side and see an angel armed with a sword chasing Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden. We continue to move from left to right and see Eve carrying the baby Abel in her arms whilst the baby Cain sleeps in a cot at her feet and then Adam at work in the fields. We next move to a scene showing Cain and Abel making their sacrifices. On the left Cain is not having great success and the smoke from his fire billows back into his eyes. His brother is having more success. We move next to a scene showing Cain murdering his brother. Next we see Noah's ark and Noah harvesting grapes and then fast a sleep having drunk too much wine. In the final scene from this sequence we see Cham trying to cover his father's nudity. After these biblical scenes there are depictions of the four Evangelists and their attributes. Mark and John are on the left and Luke and Matthew on the right. Finally the carvings are of a "heavenly" host of angels singing, praying and playing instruments; a celebration of the birth of Christ! Inside the porch the statues of the apostles are not by the Prigent atelier but the canopy is. There are also works by the Prigent atelier in niches in the buttress supporting the porch. A statue of Saint Anne teaching the Virgin Mary to read can be found in the right side niche of the right side buttress, a statue of Saint Suzanne can be found in the niche in the centre of the right side buttress and in a niche in the left side buttress is a statue of the Virgin Mary. By the west wall in the south transept there are the remains of a statue of Saint Sebastian attributed to the Prigent atelier and on the lawn a kneeling Mary Magdalene is by Bastien Prigent.

The porches at Le Tréhou, Trémaouézan, Commana, Ploudiry and Quéménéven

Works attributed to the Prigent brothers can be found in other church porches in the Élorn valley. There are works by Bastien Prigent in Le Tréhou, Trémaouézan, Commana and Ploudiry and by Henry Prigent in Quéménéven. At Le Tréhou there is a statue by Bastien of Saint Pitère decorating the niche on the porch gable. The saint holds a book and a palm It is at Le Tréhou that we can see Roland Doré's statues of the apostles in the porch interior.
At Trémaouézan's Église Notre-Dame the statue of Saint Trinité in the right side niche in the porch buttress on the right side is attributed to Bastien Prigent. God the Holy Father is depicted sitting with the body of his dead son across his knees. At Commana, see Commana Parish close Bastien Prigent is attributed with the statues of the Virgin Mary and Joseph placed on the porch buttresses. Joseph stands with his pilgrim's stick held across his chest. The Virgin Mary is depicted at prayer. At Ploudiry, see Ploudiry Parish close, Bastien Prigent was responsible for the statue of Saint Sebastian in the right side buttress.
At Quéménéven, Henry Prigent was the sculptor of the statue of Saint Lawrence who carries a closed book and a gridiron to remind us of the nature of his martyrdom.

Crosses and calvaries where parts are attributed to the Prigent atelier

Emmanuelle Le Seac'h reckons that there are 17 calvaries in the region that have been re-erected using sculptures from various workshops. Some of these are described below:-
Type of sculptureLocationDescription
The Croix-de-la-Vierge calvaryLanderneauThere is a Henry Prigent pietà mixed with other statues which date to 1681.
Church calvaryLanneufretBack to back statues from the Prigent atelier of the Virgin Mary paired with a "Christ liė", a pietà and John the Evangelist paired with a monk are mixed with a 20th-century crucifixion.
Church calvaryPlonevez-PorzayThe depiction of the crucified Christ and an angel carrying a titulus are attributed to the Prigent atelier. There are also statues depicting Saints Herbot and Miliau which date to 1925.
Chapel calvaryPleybenOutside the Saint-Laurent chapel, the calvary's Virgin Mary back to back with Saint Laurent, the depiction of the resurrected Christ and a back to back John the Evangelist paired with a bishop are all by the Prigent atelier.
Church calvariesPloudanielIn the Saint Éloi chapel are the remains of two calvaries. There is a back to back statue of John the Evangelist and another saint and a "Christ aux outrages". Also outside Ploudaniel's Saint-Pėtronille chapel there is a calvary attributed to the Prigent atelier with statues of Saint Pėtronille and John the Evangelist by Bastien Prigent and by the shaft of the cross a Mary Magdalene attributed to the atelier.
Cross of LaguenGuimiliauThe Prigent atelier are attributed with the depiction of the crucified Christ paired with the Virgin Mary with child.
Cemetery calvaryBourg-BlancThe Prigent atelier were responsible for the statues of the rich man back to back with John the Evangelist, Mary Magdalene back to back with Saint Yves and the Virgin Mary back to back with a poor man as well as the crucified Christ and a "Christ liė".
Church calvarySaint-DerrienHere there is a calvary where statues of the Virgin Mary, the crucifixion paired with a pietà and a statue of John the Evangelist are attributed to the Prigent atelier as are statues of the Virgin Mary, John the Evangelist and Saint Derrien on horseback.
Church calvaryQuimperIn the cloister garden of Quimper's Église Notre-Dame de Locmaria there are the remains of a calvary and the Prigent atelier are attributed with a back to back statue of Saint Peter paired with the Virgin Mary.
The calvary at BrondusvalPlouiderLittle is left of the calvary but the statues of Saint Yves, Saint Fiacre and an unidentified saint are attributed to the Prigent atelier.
Calvary of the "Maison du sculptor Quillivic"PlouhinecThis is a contemporary calvary where the image of the crucified Christ is replaced by the top section of the frame of a Gothic window. The calvary does have back to back statues of the Virgin Mary paired with Saint Yves and John the Evangelist paired with Francis of Assisi, all four being the work of Bastien Prigent.
The Lambader chapel calvaryPlouvornThe calvary has statues of the Virgin Mary and Mary Magdalene by the Prigent atelier who also carved the blason of the Audren de Kerdrel and the emblem of the "Cinq-Plais" which decorate the calvary
Calvary in church cemeteryGuissényThe calvary is inscribed "J. Habasc gouver 1555" and the statues are attributed to Henry Prigent. The calvary was originally located at the Saint Yves chapel at Kervézennec but after the 1920 pilgrimage it was erected at Guissény by the restorer Donnart. The calvary has a depiction of the Virgin Mary back to back to a depiction of Saint Yves, the crucified Christ reversed with a "Christ lié" and John the Evangelist backed with a depiction of a bishop. The head of John the Evangelist has disappeared and the head of the bishop is not the original head.^^
Calvary of the Chapelle PolBrignogan-PlagesThe calvary at the Pol chapel is carved from kersanton stone. The calvary is 4.50 metres high and the crosspiece has a praying angel in the centre and back to back statues of the Virgin Mary paired with an apostle and Saint Nicolas paired with a female saint. Of this calvary only the depiction of the crucified Jesus and the praying angel are by Henry Prigent. Further statues by Prigent which were originally part of the calvary can be seen in the chapel itself with a back to back depiction of Saint Paul Aurelian and an unidentified saint as well as a depiction of Saint Nicholas in the choir area, a pietà on the east wall and a "Christ ressuscitė" on the south wall.
Calvary of the Église Sainte Marie MadeleineDinéaultOnly the pedestal supporting the calvary has work by the Prigents with Bastien Prigent carving a depiction of Mary Magdalene, her head looking up to Jesus on the cross and John the Evangelist standing, his head bowed and with furrowed brow whilst Francis of Assisi is depicted at the foot of the shaft of the cross and on the front of the pedestal a bas-relief depicting a monk holding out a cloth on which a holy face is carved. These worke date to 1550. The photograph shown to the right is of Bastien Prigent's John the Evangelist. The statues on the crosspiece are not by the Prigent workshop, but date to 1696 and depict back to back statues of the Virgin Mary paired with Saint Sébastien, a bishop backed with a pietà, a depiction of Mary Magdalene on her knees and lifting the lid from her pot of ointment and John the Evangelist paired with Saint Peter whilst the sculpture of the crucified Jesus reversed with a "Christ aux liens" are attributed to the Roland Dorė workshop. This calvary is 6.00 metres high. Further Prigent sculptures can be seen in the Église Sainte Marie Madeleine itself.
The calvaries at la Croix-Neuve and Kersaingilly.GuiclanThere are two calvaries in the Guiclan area. Of the sculpture involved with the Croix-Neuve calvary only the statue of Saint Veronica and the Virgin Mary with infant are by the Prigent atelier. The calvary is a simple one with statues of Saint Veronica and the Virgin Mary with child positioned on either side of the depiction of the crucified Christ. The Kerrsaingilly calvary features depictions of Saint Yves, the crucified Christ reversed with the Virgin Mary with child and Saint Gilles and the Prigent workshop only worked on the statue of Saint Yves. Bastien Prigent is attributed with the work. Saint Yves is depicted in the robe of a lawyer. This statue came from La Roche-Maurice and was added to the calvary when in 1889 it was restored by Yan Larhantec.
Calvary of the Église Notre DameLe FolgoëtIn many instances calvaries in Brittany were restored or reconstructed using works by separate sculptors or ateliers, which can make attribution difficult. The Le Folgoët calvary is an example of this with the Prigent workshop's pietà on the west face of the calvary being mixed with a depiction of Cardinal de Coëtivy by the Maître du Folgoët and a crucifixion attributed to the Maître de Plougastel. The nearby musée du Doyenné has remains of a calvary on the lawn, this attributed to Fayet.
Calvary in cemeteryLa Forest-LanderneauIn the upper section of La Forest-Landerneau's cemetery are the remains of an old calvary, the three pieces involved being attributed to the Prigent workshop. The sculptors have captured perfectly the grief and the sense of loss felt by those depicted. One piece depicts the Virgin Mary back to back with Mary Magdalene and another pairs John the Evangelist with an unidentified saint. They stand on either side of a pietà. All have tears rolling down their cheeks. John the Evangelist places a hand on his chest and the unidentified saint behind him opens his hands in a gesture of powerlessness. In the lower part of the same cemetery is a calvary involving a back-to-back work depicting the Virgin Mary and a female martyred saint, a depiction of the crucified Christ backed with a pietà and John the Evangelist depicted back to back with a bishop and at the base of the cross is a depiction of a kneeling Mary Magdalene, her pot of ointment on the ground at her side, her face racked with grief. Attribution of these works is unclear, but the kneeling Mary Magdalene has been attributed to the Prigent workshop. The calvary also bears the coats of arms of both France and Brittany, a reference to a "mission" or pilgrimage of 1887 and the date 1762, probably a date when the calvary underwent some restoration.
The Croix de Saint SauveurKerlouanThe Croix de Saint Sauveur was destroyed during the Second World War but Bastien Prigent's "Holy Trinity" has survived although scarred by chiseling. The Holy Father sits on a throne and wears a crown and a dove emerges from his mouth.
The Calvary de LambaderPlouvornThe Prigent atelier carved the back to back statue of the Virgin Mary reversed to Mary Magdalene which is part of this calvary.
The Croix de BrondusvalPlouiderThere are two Prigent sculptures of Saint Yves and Saint Fiacre on the calvary.
CalvaryQuimperAt Quimper's Église Locmaria is part of a calvary thought to have belonged to the priory. A Prigent atelier statue of the Virgin Mary back to back with Saint Peter has been preserved.

Note on the sculptor Fayet

Apart from "Le compagnon de Pleyben", who worked with the Prigent brothers on the monumental calvary at Pleyben, the sculptor known as Fayet also worked in the Prigent atelier and is best known for his work on the Calvary at Lopérec. Fayet worked with the atelier from 1552 to 1563. His style of sculpting was so similar to the Prigent brothers that it is sometimes difficult to tell their work apart. Like the two brothers he often added three tears to the faces of his subjects and their faces were oval in shape as were those of the Prigents.
Other works by Fayet include those listed below.
Type of sculptureLocationDescription
Monumental CalvaryPleybenFayet completed eight of the scenes depicted on the Pleyben calvary in sandstone.
Remains of a calvaryLe FolgoëtThe remains of a calvary on the lawn of the Musée du Doyenné are attributed to Fayet. The sculpture is of Christ on the cross. He has lost arms and legs below the knee.
Remains of a calvaryIrvillacThe Coat-Nant calvary by the chapel Coat-Nant Notre-Dame de Lorette has the mutilated figure of Christ which is attributed to Fayet. The calvary is positioned over a fountain and is known as one of Roland Dorė's finest works. Fayet's statue of the crucified Christ has neither arms nor legs and was placed on the calvary in 1935.
Remains of a crucifixLanderneauThe remains of a crucifix on the gable of the École du Trumeur is thought to be by Fayet. The figure of Christ, which could have come from a cross or a calvary, has lost both arms and legs below the knee.
Calvary in cemeteryLazFayet was responsible for the back to back statues depicting the crucified Christ and an "Ecce Homo" and the banner on the shaft reading "Ecce Homo 1563".

Fayet also executed several sculptures of angels with their wings spread which were positioned on either side of the crucified Christ and were collecting his blood into chalices. Examples are at Briec-de-l'Odet for the Saint-Adrien calvary, at Landudal, in the cemetery at Plounéour-Ménez, the Sainte-Barbe chapel at Ploéven, the ėglise at Plozévet and on the Kernaliou cross in Trégourez.