Ambroise-Marguerite Bardin Explained

Ambroise-Marguerite Bardin (1768–1842) was a French painter and pastellist.

Born in Charmentray, Bardin was the daughter of painter Jean Bardin (1732–1809), with whom she studied; her mother was Marie-Madeleine Le Gein (c.1742–1805). On February 11, 1793, she married Pierre-François Mollière, a drawing teacher and assistant of her father's, in Orléans, and with him would later establish a porcelain factory.[1] It appears that she abandoned painting upon her marriage.[2] She also practiced engraving during her career.[3] One "Mlle Bardin soeur" advertised drawing materials in a 1791 edition of the Journal de Loiret, but evidence suggests this was the painter's aunt; she had no sisters. Bardin died in Paris. A pastel self-portrait in which she is painting a portrait of her father, dated 1791, is in the collection of the Musée des Beaux-Arts d'Orléans.[1]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.pastellists.com/Articles/Bardin.pdf Profile
  2. Web site: Bardin, Ambroise-Marguerite. thesaurus.cerl.org. 23 July 2017.
  3. Book: The Triumph of Eros: Art and Seduction in 18th-Century France. 2006. Fontanka. 978-0-9543095-8-9.