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Robert Nanteuil

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Name
  
Robert Nanteuil

Role
  
Artist

Period
  
Baroque



Died
  
December 9, 1678, Paris, France

Robert Nanteuil


Robert Nanteuil (1623 or 1630–1678) was a French portrait artist : engraver, draughtsman and pastellist to the court of Louis XIV

Contents

Ornament Doesn't Need Little Flowers: Anton Würth and Engraving in the 21st Century


Life

He was born in Reims in 1623, or, as other authorities state, in 1630, the son of a merchant of Reims. He studied philosophy in his native Reims but was already an engraver by the time he defended his thesis in 1645. He studied engraving under his brother-in-law, Nicolas Regnesson, whose sister he married in 1646. In 1647 he moved to Paris, where he worked with the engraver Abraham Bosse and the painter Philippe de Champaigne.

Robert Nanteuil Robert Nanteuil Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

His crayon drawings and prints quickly earned him a reputation as the most sought-after portraitist of his time, and he was appointed designer and engraver of the cabinet of King Louis XIV. It was mainly due to his influence that the king granted the edict of 1660, dated from Saint-Jean-de-Luz, by which engraving was pronounced free and distinct from the mechanical arts, and its practitioners were declared entitled to the privileges of other artists. Nanteuil's clientele included the King Sun himself, Cardinal Richelieu, Queen Christina of Sweden and many other high-ranking aristocrats and personages of note. Among the finest works of his fully developed period may be named the portraits of Pompone de Bellièvre, Gilles Ménage, Jean Loret, the duc de la Meilleraye and the duchess de Nemours. He died at Paris in 1678.

Robert Nanteuil FileSimon Arnauld Marquis de Pomponne by Robert Nanteuil

His pupils included Pieter van Schuppen and Domenico Tempesti.

Work

Robert Nanteuil FileRobert Nanteuil Anne d 39Autriche Reine de France

The plates of Nanteuil, several of them approaching the scale of life, number about three hundred. In his early practice he imitated the technique of his predecessors, working with straight lines, strengthened, but not crossed, in the shadows, in the style of Claude Mellan, and in other prints cross-hatching like Regnesson, or stippling in the manner of Jean Boulanger; but he gradually asserted his full individuality, modelling the faces of his portraits with the utmost precision and completeness, and employing various methods of touch for the draperies and other parts of his plates.

References

Robert Nanteuil Wikipedia


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