Mini-Post | Charles-Antoine Coypel

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I am obsessed with the luxury of the fabrics, bows, ruffles and utter GLOW of this piece in the Met’s collection: to me, it is so romantic, enhanced by the use of pastels.

Charles-Antoine Coypel, 1743, Met Museum, 2011.84

This is a Coypel portrait of Marie Elisabeth de Séré de Rieux and her husband François de Jullienne. Julienne was a collector and patron of the rococo painter Antoine Watteau, with wealth that came from his father, who was a textile merchant.

Charles-Antoine Coypel was an official painter to Louis XV: if you think nepo babies are a new thing, Coypel’s father was the First Painter to the King, giving Coypel a glittering start.

His father died in 1722, with Coypel ascending to become the chief painter of the Duc d’Orléans, lodging at the Louvre, before taking up the mantle of premier peintre in 1747. He would also produce a body of literary work, and design tapestries for Manufacture de Gobelins, the best manufactory of tapestries in France at the time.


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2 responses to “Mini-Post | Charles-Antoine Coypel”

  1. I’m so pleased to have discovered your blog which is so passionate about all the things I’m passionate about! And I love your writing.

    I enjoy looking at paintings without, unfortunately, the talent or training to appreciate them intellectualy, so when I say that I love this one I’m afraid I’m talking about the subject and not the style, the ‘what’ rather than the ‘how’ and this one appeals to me above all because of the colours. I also find it very touching.

    1. That is so kind of you to say, thank you so much! Honestly, the what is as interesting as the how: and the colours! Genuinely, I think with art, a lot of it is about how it makes you feel at first impression. This one grabbed me because of the softness, and all those bows and ruffles! It’s as much a part of appreciating the art as analysing other aspects of it, in my opinion! I’m so glad you enjoy the blog as much as I love writing it!

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