Sneha Girap (Editor)

Louise Moillon

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
Louise Moillon

Period
  
Baroque

Name
  
Louise Moillon


Movement
  
Baroque

Nationality
  
France

Known for
  
Louise Moillon Louise Moillon Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Born
  
1609

Died
  
December 21, 1696, Paris, France

Artwork
  
Still-Life with Cherries, Strawberries and Gooseberries

Parents
  
Nicolas Moillon, Marie Gilbert

Louise moillon paintings jacques de wert


Louise Moillon (1609–1696) was a French painter in the Baroque era. She became known as one of the best still life painters during her time. Her work was purchased by King Charles I of England, as well as the French nobility.

Contents

Louise Moillon wwwmuseeprotestantorgwpcontentuploads201312

Famous Still Life Artists


Early life

Louise Moillon

Moillon was born into a strict Calvinist family in Paris in 1609. She was one of seven children; her father, Nicolas, was a landscape and portrait painter and an art dealer, and her mother was Marie Gilbert. Moillon learned to paint from her father, however he died when she was 10 years old. The following year, Moillon's mother married another painter and art dealer, Francois Garnier. Garnier gave Moillon art lessons and continued her art education.

Image result for Louise Moillon

Moillon's family lived in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighbourhood of Paris, an area with many Protestant refugees from the Netherlands, including artists. These artists introduced Moillon to their traditional style of still life painting, which influenced the development of her particular style.

Paintings

Louise Moillon From the Vault Louise Moillon Broad Strokes The

Moillon specialised in still-life paintings, usually of fruit or flowers, with an occasional human figure. Her work is characterised by stillness and acute detail, such as the texture of exotic fruit.

The majority of her work was done in the 1630s, before her marriage in 1640 to wealthy timber merchant Etienne Girardot de Chancourt. In 1641, however, she painted a large composition of fruit and flowers in collaboration with Pieter van Boekel (Pierre van Boucle) and Jacques Linard. Her last dated work is from 1674.

Approximately forty of her paintings survive today, most of which are signed Louyse Moillon. Four still-life paintings, once thought to be Moillon's, have now been reattributed to Osias Beert, a Flemish still life artist.

Mollion died of heart failure in 1696.

References

Louise Moillon Wikipedia