Marianne Roland Michel
 
Michel, Marianne Roland
Michel, Marianne Roland
United States of America
Subscribed to the newsletter
Send me site notifications emails
Description: Anne Vallayer-Coster: Painter to the Court of Marie-Antoinette
In this essay, I propose to establish a basic framework for assessing the life and career of Anne Vallayer-Coster, working only from the facts and from a few documents that cast an especially revealing light on them...
PublisherDallas Museum of Art
Related print edition pages: pp.13-37
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00325.2
Description: Anne Vallayer-Coster: Painter to the Court of Marie-Antoinette
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00325
Anne Vallayer-Coster (1744–1818) was one of the most talented still-life painters of the French school. Her exquisite paintings, today located in some of the world’s finest museums, were admired and collected by many of her contemporaries, including Marie Antoinette, who became the artist’s most important patron.

This book, the first devoted to Vallayer-Coster in over 30 years, presents a stunning array of the artist’s still-life works, many of which have never before been reproduced in color. Recently rediscovered works, including three royal portraits from the collection of Versailles and a hitherto unknown pastel of Marie-Antoinette, are published here for the first time. The authors draw on the most current research to examine Vallayer-Coster’s relationship with landscape painter Joseph Vernet; her response to her immediate predecessor, still-life painter Jean-Siméon Chardin; her role with contemporary collectors of her art; and her place in the larger context of the eighteenth-century art world. The book also includes new archival and conservation findings and an illustrated index of extant paintings by Vallayer-Coster.

*This eBook is available exclusively on the A&AePortal.*
Print publication date June 2022 (out of print)
Print ISBN 9780300093292
EISBN 9780300270358
Illustrations 264
Print Status out of print
Description: The Architecture of Western Gardens: A Design History from the Renaissance to the...
Among the arabesques engraved by Huquier in the style of Watteau some years after the latter’s death are two matching plates. Both depict figures in ornamental gardens: a bacchante in a wild landscape where trees and reeds border a deep ravine, and ‘gallants’ in a French-style garden of symmetrical design with clipped yews and statues linked by a colonnade rising...
PublisherMIT Press
Related print edition pages: pp.243-249
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00122.036