Louis XIII style, visual arts produced in France during the reign of Louis XIII (1601–43). Louis was but a child when he ascended the throne in 1610, and his mother, Marie de Médicis, assumed the powers of regent. Having close ties with Italy, Marie introduced much of the art of that country into her court. The Mannerist influences from Italy and from Flanders were so great that a true French style did not develop until the second quarter of the century. At that time the Italian influences of the painter Caravaggio were assimilated into a new interest in genre scenes, notably in the work of Georges de la Tour and the brothers Le Nain—Antoine, Louis, and Mathieu. The main French tradition in painting, however, was carried on under the influence of the Italian Carracci brothers by Simon Vouet. It was Vouet who trained the academic painters of the next generation, though the work of Nicolas Poussin proved to be the greater influence on later French painting.
Sculpture in France during this period was not of outstanding quality. Those working in this area included Jacques Sarrazin and Jean Warin, competent craftsmen but lacking the great talents that flourished under Louis XIV.
Perhaps the most prolific area for the arts under Marie de Médicis and Louis XIII was the field of architecture. Salomon de Brosse, the chief architect, designed both the Palais de Justice at Rennes and, for Marie de Médicis, the Palais du Luxembourg in Paris (begun 1615). As in the other arts, the Italian influence was felt, notably in the work of Jacques Lemercier, who designed works for the powerful Cardinal de Richelieu, including the Church of the Sorbonne in Paris (begun 1635). It was not, however, until the next king’s rule that French architecture reached its greatest heights, as in the work of François Mansart.
The furniture of the Louis XIII period, typically massive and solidly built, is characterized by carving and turning (shaping on a lathe). Common decorative motifs found on it include cherubs, ornate scrollwork, cartouches (ornamental frames), fruit-and-flower swags, and grotesque masks.