Jean-Baptiste Nattier
Jean-Baptiste Nattier (27 September 1678, Paris - 23 May 1726, Paris) was a French history painter.
Life & work[]
His father was the portrait painter, miniaturist, Marie Courtois. His brother, Jean-Marc Nattier, also became a painter. Both brothers received their first art lessons from their father.
and his mother was theFrom 1704 to 1709, he studied at the Académie de France à Rome and, in 1712, was received as a member of the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture upon presentation of his painting, Joseph sollicité par la femme de Putiphar.
He became involved the sexual scandals surrounding pederastic network and executed.[1] Nattier was imprisoned in the Bastille and his membership in the Académie was rescinded. Rather than suffer the fate of Deschauffour (whose corpse was publicly burned in the Place de Grève), he committed suicide by cutting his throat with an oyster knife.[citation needed]
, who was convicted for operating aHis professional belongings at the Acadėmie were returned to his family.
References[]
- ^ Claude Pasteur, La princesse Palatine, Taillandier 2001 p.131-132
- Ferdinand Hoefer, Nouvelle Biographie générale, t. 37, Paris, Firmin-Didot, 1863, pgs. 508-9.
External links[]
Media related to Jean-Baptiste Nattier at Wikimedia Commons
- 1678 births
- 1726 deaths
- French painters
- French history painters
- Painters who committed suicide
- French painter stubs