Paul Mignard Explained

Paul Mignard (27 December 1639, in Avignon – 15 October 1691, in Lyon) was a French painter and etcher.[1] Born into an important artistic family with its origins in Troyes, he is known mainly as a portrait painter.[2]

Paul Mignard
Birth Date:December 27, 1639
Birth Place:Avignon, Vaucluse, France
Death Place:Lyon, France
Nationality:French
Occupation:Painter, etcher
Father:Nicolas Mignard
Family:
Education:Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture
Spouse:Marie-Madeleine Chenard

Life

Paul Mignard was born in Avignon on 27 December 1639. He was the son of Nicolas Mignard and Marguerite d'Avril. His family included a number of artists. His father and uncle Pierre Mignard were prominent history and portrait painters. His younger brother Pierre became an architect and painter.[1] Paul Mignard was a pupil of his uncle Pierre Mignard.[2] He was received into the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture on 11 June 1672. The work that earned him admission to the Académie was a large Portrait of Nicolas Mignard, painting an Annunciation (Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon).[3] It shows his father sitting in his studio in front of a painting he is working on and holding his palette and brushes. On a table placed next to his father is a copy of the Architettura di Palladio, together with a ruler and compasses.[4]

It is known that Mignard spent time in Italy in the 1670s but little is known about his stay.[5] He also was in England painting portraits. He was active in Bavaria as court painter to the family of the Elector. He painted several portraits of the Elector and his wife, who held him in high esteem. He dedicated his self-portrait (Alte Pinakothek, Munchen) to Henriette Adelaide of Savoy.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Adrien Marcel, 'Nicolas Mignard, Mémoires de l'Académie de Vaucluse', 1931, p.16
  2. Natalis Rondot, 'Les peintres de Lyon du quatorzième au dix-huitième siècle', 1888, p. 161-162
  3. Hannah Williams, 'Académie Royale: A History in Portraits', Ashgate Publishing Ltd., 2015, p. 27
  4. Guido Beltramini, 'Palladio and Northern Europe: Books, Travellers, Architects', 1999, p. 43
  5. J. Claye, Gazette des beaux-arts, 1966, p. 22-24
  6. Lada Nikolenko, 'Pierre Mignard', Nitz Verlag, 1983, p. 27-34
  7. Stewart Buettner, 'Great composers, great artists: portraits', Reinhard G. Pauly Amadeus Press, 1992, p. 26
  8. Charles Perrault, 'La peinture', Librairie Droz, 1992, p. 172
  9. André Fontaine, 'Documents sur Pierre Mignard, Paul Mignard et Charles Le Brun', in: Archives de l'art français: recueil de documents inédits publiés par la Sociéte de l'histoire de l'art français, J. Schemit, 1907, p. 311-318
  10. Pierre Rosenberg, 'Poussin, Lorrain, Watteau, Fragonard ...: französische Meisterwerke des 17. und 18. Jahrhunderts aus deutschen Sammlungen : eine Ausstellung der Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland Bonn, der Bayerischen Staatsgemäldesammlungen, München, der Stiftung Haus der Kunst, München, und der Réunion der Musées Nationaux, Paris in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Musée du Louvre, Paris : [20. April bis 31. Juli 2005 Galeries Nationales du Grand Palais, Paris; 7. Oktober 2005 - 8. Januar 2006 Haus der Kunst München, 17. Februar bis zum 14. Mai 2006 Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in Bonn', Hatje Cantz, 2005, p. 56-58 {{in lang|fr}}</ref> He married Marie-Madeleine Chenard. The couple had a few children. On 7 September 1690, Mignard was appointed ordinary painter of the city of Lyons. This appointment required him to paint portraits of city officials.<ref name=arc/> Paul Mignard died on 15 October 1691 in Lyon.<ref name=arc/> ==Work== [[File:Paul Mignard - Portrait of Mrs Peter Beesley.jpg|thumb|''Portrait of Mrs Peter Beesley'']]Paul Mignard painted mainly portraits. He had learned from his uncle Pierre the art of court portrait painting, characterised by its emphasis on elegant poses and elaborately worked out details of lavish costumes. The works stressed the high status of the sitters and the affluence of their entourage.[6]

    As father and son Mignard painted in a style, which was not very different, the portrait of Jean-Baptiste Lully has often been attributed to the father. However, the inscription on the print that was engraved after this portrait by Jean-Louis Roullet in 1687 clearly states that it was Paul Mignard, the son of Nicolas Mignard, who painted it.[7] Paul Mignard was also connected to a series of portraits of beauties executed for the Duke of Savoy in the mid 1670s.

    On 2 January 1683 Paul Mignard presented the Académie with his 'Ode à Mr Le Brun pemier peintre du Roy' (Paris, published at Pierre Le Petit, 1683). In this publication Mignard sang the praises of the art of the leading French painter of the 17th century, Charles Le Brun, who was a friend of his father but a rival of his uncle.[8] Not long before the Ode was published, Paul’s uncle Pierre and Le Brun had engaged in a bitter exchange of accusations. Paul Mignard took the side of Le Brun against his uncle and the Ode was his manner of expressing his support for Le Brun. The Ode is considered to be an awful example of sycophancy.[9]

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