Thursday, November 3, 2011

Louise Moillon


Louise Moillon (1610–1696) was a French painter in the decorative era. She became known as one of the best female still life painters during her time, and worked for King Charles I of England, as well as the French nobility.


Biography:
Moillon came from a strict Calvinist family. Her father, Brother Isaac, and stepfather were both paint dealers and artists themselves. According to the RKD, Louise learned to paint from her father Nicolas Moillon and Francois Garnier. She gained her particular style of still life painting from the Academia de Saint-Germain-des-Pres. She usually signed her paintings with Louyse Moillon.Moillon lived and worked in France her whole life.


Paintings:
The majority of her work was done in the 1630s, before her marriage in 1640 to wealthy timber merchant Etienne Girardot de Chancourt. Though her last dated work is from 1645, she died of heart failure during 1696. Her work continues to be admired for its quiet style.


 Four still-life paintings, once thought to be Moillon's, have now been reattributed to Osias Beert, a Flemish still life artist.

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