Philippe de Champaigne PRICE CHARTS
1602 Brussels, Belgium - 1674 Paris, France. Known for: Portraits paintings of distinguished men, Christian figures and landscapes.
Philippe de Champaigne trained first in his native Brussels with Jean Bouillon and the portraitist Michel de Bordeau before entering the studio of the landscape painter Jacques Fouquieres in 1620. He... Read full biography
Philippe de Champaigne trained first in his native Brussels with Jean Bouillon and the portraitist Michel de Bordeau before entering the studio of the landscape painter Jacques Fouquieres in 1620. He followed Fouquieres to Paris in 1621, working in the studio of Georges Lallemant (1580-1636), a... Read full biography
Philippe de Champaigne trained first in his native Brussels with Jean Bouillon and the portraitist Michel de Bordeau before entering the studio of the landscape painter Jacques Fouquieres in 1620. He followed Fouquieres to Paris in 1621, working in the studio of Georges Lallemant (1580-1636), a painter of the late Fontainebleau school. Under the supervision of Nicolas Duchesne (d. 1628) in 1625, Champaigne collaborated with Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665) on decorations for the Luxembourg Palace,... Read full biography
Philippe de Champaigne trained first in his native Brussels with Jean Bouillon and the portraitist Michel de Bordeau before entering the studio of the landscape painter Jacques Fouquieres in 1620. He followed Fouquieres to Paris in 1621, working in the studio of Georges Lallemant (1580-1636), a painter of the late Fontainebleau school. Under the supervision of Nicolas Duchesne (d. 1628) in 1625, Champaigne collaborated with Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665) on decorations for the Luxembourg Palace, the residence of the queen mother, Marie de' Medici (1573-1642). Champaigne married Duchesne's daughter Charlotte after returning to Brussels in 1627 and later succeeded Duchesne as painter to the queen mother, for whom he decorated the church of the... Read full biography
Philippe de Champaigne trained first in his native Brussels with Jean Bouillon and the portraitist Michel de Bordeau before entering the studio of the landscape painter Jacques Fouquieres in 1620. He followed Fouquieres to Paris in 1621, working in the studio of Georges Lallemant (1580-1636), a painter of the late Fontainebleau school. Under the supervision of Nicolas Duchesne (d. 1628) in 1625, Champaigne collaborated with Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665) on decorations for the Luxembourg Palace, the residence of the queen mother, Marie de' Medici (1573-1642). Champaigne married Duchesne's daughter Charlotte after returning to Brussels in 1627 and later succeeded Duchesne as painter to the queen mother, for whom he decorated the church of the Carmelite convent on the rue St. Jacques. In the early 1630s, Champaigne began to paint for Cardinal Richelieu (1585-1642), who would be... Read full biography
Philippe de Champaigne - Charts
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