Leon Davent. Léon Davent was a French printmaker in the mid 16th century, closely associated with the First School of Fontainebleau.
   He worked in both engraving and etching and many of his works are based on designs by Francesco Primaticcio, rendered boldly and freely. Others use designs by Luca Penni and other artists.
   It is thought that there was a workshop at the Palace of Fontainebleau itself in the 1540s, where he was one of the leading printmakers. Their main purpose seems to have been to record the new style being forged at Fontainebleau, copying both the main subject paintings and the elaborate ornamental stuccos and other decorations.
   With a couple of exceptions his prints are signed only with L.D., and his identity was long uncertain; he is known as the Master L.D. in older literature.
   Lists of his works have attributed between 98 and 226 prints to him. Very little is known about his life; his dated prints run between 1540 and 1556, when he left a series incomplete, which may indicate his death. There is no evidence that he trained as a painter, and like many early engravers he may have been trained as a goldsmith, a trade where engraving was still important. His engravings, which are presumed to be his earliest works, show a considerable fluency in this difficult technique. According to Henri Zerner, he may have produced about 9 early prints before moving to Fontainebleau, and h
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