Baroque and Rococo

 

Baroque and Rococo Art Map





Philippe de Champaigne





 

 
Philippe de Champaigne

(b Brussels, 14 May 1602; d Paris, 12 Aug 1674).

His artistic style was varied: far from being limited to the realism traditionally associated with Flemish painters, it developed from late Mannerism to the powerful lyricism of the Baroque. It was influenced as much by Rubens as by Vouet, culminating in an aesthetic vision of the world and of humanity that was based on an analytic view of appearances and on psychological truth. He was perhaps the greatest portrait painter of 17th-century France. At the same time he was one of the principal instigators of the Classical tendency and a founder-member of the Academie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture. His growing commitment to the Jansenist religious movement and the severe plainness of the works that it inspired has led to his being sometimes considered to typify Jansenist thinking, with its iconoclastic impulse, in spite of the opposing evidence of his other paintings. He should be seen as an example of the successful integration of foreign elements into French culture and as the representative of the most intellectual current of French painting.




 

Retrato en pie de Ana de Austria


 


Retrato en pie de Luis XIII
 

 


Moises con los diez Mandamientos

 


Cristo yacente


 

The Presentation of the Temple

1648
Oil on canvas, 257 x 197 cm
Musees Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels


 

The Supper at Emmaus

Oil on canvas, 217 x 226 cm
Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Ghent


 

Still-Life with a Skull

Oil on panel, 28 x 37 cm
Musee de Tesse, Le Mans


 


La ultima Cena

 


Jean Baptiste Colbert


 

Retrato de Hombre


 

The Aldermen of the City of Paris


 

The Nativity


 

Portrat des Jacobus Govaerts


 

Portrait of Antoine Singlin

 

Portrait of a Man

1650
Oil on canvas, 91 x 72 cm
Musee du Louvre, Paris


 

Portrait of Robert Arnauld d'Andilly

1667
Oil on canvas, 78 x 64 cm
Musee du Louvre, Paris