Jean-Baptiste Monnoyer
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Jean-Baptiste Monnoyer[1] (12 January 1636 — 20 February 1699) was a Franco-Flemish painter who specialised in flower pieces. He was attached to the Gobelins tapestry workshops and the Beauvais tapestry workshops, too, where he produced cartoons of fruit and flowers for the tapestry-weavers, and at Beauvais was one of three painters[2]who collaborated to produce cartoons for the suite The Emperor of China.
He was born at Lille, but was in Paris by 1650, where he was documented working on the decors of the Hôtel Lambert. He was taken up by Charles Le Brun for decorative painting at the Château de Marly and at the Grand Dauphin's residence, the Château de Meudon. He was received at the Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture in 1665 with a piece of the genre that he made his specialty, a still life of flowers and fruit combined with objets d'art.[3] His only appearance at the Paris salon was in 1673, when four paintings of flowers were exhibited by "M. Baptiste".[4]
In 1690 he left France for England, to work on painting decorations for Montagu House, Bloomsbury, London, where he produced over fifty panels of fruit and flowers for overmantels and overdoors, some of which have survived at Boughton House, Northamptonshire.[5] He died in London in 1699. His eldest son, Jean-Baptiste Monnoyer le Jeune, was a painter of battle scenes.
Monnoyer's engravings of flower pieces were being used by tapestry makers, such as at the Soho tapestry works in London, long after his death.[6]
[edit] Notes
- ^ His contemporaries simply called him Baptiste.
- ^ The other two were Jean Baptiste Blin (or Belin) de Fontenay, Monnoyer's son-in-law, and Guy Louis de Vernansal the Elder; Monnoyer's role in this particular case was apparently secondary. (Edith A. Standen, "The Story of the Emperor of China: A Beauvais Tapestry Series" Metropolitan Museum Journal 11 (1976, pp. 103-117), p. 115).
- ^ Monnoyer's morceau de reception is at the Musée Fabre, Montpellier.
- ^ Standen 1976:115.
- ^ Edward Croft-Murray, Decorative Painting in England vol I (London) 1962:255.
- ^ Geoffrey Beard, "William Bradshaw: Furniture Maker and Tapestry Weaver" Metropolitan Museum Journal 37 (2002), pp. 167-169.