Jean Tijou


Jean Tijou was a French Huguenot ironworker. He is known solely through his work in England, where he worked on several of the key English Baroque buildings. Very little is known of him biographically. He arrived in England in c.1689 and enjoyed the patronage of William III and Mary II. He left England for the continent c.1712 He was father-in-law to Louis Laguerre who married in St Martin-in-the-Fields.
His major commissions include making gates and railings for Hampton Court Palace, where he worked between 1689 and 1700, he was paid £2,160 2s 0.25d for the wrought iron screens at Hampton Court, he also is known to have worked at Kensington Palace. He produced the screens and grilles of St. Paul's Cathedral for Sir Christopher Wren, and worked at country houses such as Easton Neston, Burghley and Chatsworth. At Chatsworth his surviving works include the balustrade of the upper flight of the grand staircase and the set of gates known as the Golden Gates, which were moved to their present location at the north entrance to the park in the 19th century.
Little else is known of the man, Jean Tijou, other than he was a master metalworker. Tijou elevated blacksmithing to an art with his lavish baroque sheet metal overlay on iron structures. To achieve this style of artistry, sheet metal is hammered from the rear of the plate to create form and then used to cover fire welds on foundational iron structures such as gates, hinges, fence work or wall deco pieces.
Some of works by Tijou were gold plated to add to aesthetics. It is possible that a rendering of Jean Tijou appears in a book which he designed entitled A New Book of Drawings Invented and Desined by John Tijou, in 1693. His book was engraved by a famous artisan himself, Michiel van der Gucht. The possible rendering of Tijou appears at the bottom of the page. The book is currently housed by the Smithsonian in the Cooper Hewitt Collection in New York City.

Gallery of Work