Jean Jacques Flipart
Jean Jacques Flipart (1719–1782) was a French engraver.
Biography[]
Flipart was born in Paris. His father was the engraver Jean Charles Flipart, under whom he received his initial training in the engraver's art. His brother Charles Joseph Flipart, who was later noted both for his engraving and painting oeuvre, also received his initial training under the father's hand.
Flipart later trained under French engraving master Laurent Cars (1699–1771).[1]
Engravings[]
Among the famous works of Flipart:
- Portrait of J. B. Greuze, A Sick Man surrounded by his Children (1767) and ;Twelfth Night ; after Greuze.
- Portrait of Jacques Dumont le Romain ; after de la Tour.
- The Holy Family ; after Giulio Romano.
- Adam and Eve ; after Charles Joseph Natoire.
- Venus presenting the Arms to Aeneas; after the same.
- A Sea-storm at Night ; after Vernet.
- A Sea-storm by Day ; after the same.
- Christ curing the Paralytic ; after Dietrich.
- A Bear-hunt ; after Carle van Loo.
- A Tiger-hunt ; after François Boucher.
- The Battle of the Centaurs and Lapiths.
Gallery[]
Madonna with the Washbasin (c. 1750)
Philippe II
Le Dessinateur (1757)
La Pelotonneuse
Competition for the Prize for the Study of Heads and Expression (1763)
Jesus heals the paralyzed (1767)
References[]
- ^ Michael Bryan, Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, biographical and critical Vol. I, George Bell and Sons, 4 York Street, Covent Garden, London (1886), p. 505
Categories:
- 1719 births
- 1782 deaths
- 18th-century engravers
- 18th-century French painters
- French male painters
- Artists from Paris
- French engravers
- French painter, 18th-century birth stubs
- Catholic engravers