Philippe de Champaigne  

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:''[[17th century art]], [[French Baroque and Classicism]]'' :''[[17th century art]], [[French Baroque and Classicism]]''
-===Late Mannerism and Early Baroque=== 
-:''[[17th century French art]]'' 
-The ascension of [[Henri IV]] to the throne brought a period of massive urban development in [[Paris, France|Paris]], including construction on the [[Pont Neuf]], the [[Place des Vosges]] (called the "Place Royale"), the Place Dauphine, and parts of the [[Louvre]].  
-Henri IV also invited the artists [[Toussaint Dubreuil]], [[Martin Fréminet]] and [[Ambroise Dubois]] to work on the [[château Fontainebleau|château of Fontainebleau]] and they are typically called the second [[School of Fontainebleau]]. 
- 
-[[Marie de Medici]], Henri IV's queen, invited the Flemish painter [[Peter Paul Rubens]] to France, and the artist painted a number of large-scale works for the queen's [[Luxembourg Palace]] in Paris. Another Flemish artist working for the court was [[Frans Pourbus the younger]]. 
- 
-Outside of France, working for the ducs of [[Lorraine]], we find a very different late mannerist style in the artists [[Jacques Bellange]], [[Claude Deruet]] and [[Jacques Callot]]. Having little contact with the French artists, they developed a heightened and extreme (and often erotic) mannerism (including night scenes and fantastic images), and excellent skill in engraving. 
- 
-The period of the early 17th century shows influences from both the north of Europe (Dutch and Flemish schools) and from Roman painters of the [[Counter-Reformation]]. Artists in France frequently debated the merits between [[Peter Paul Rubens]] (the Flemish baroque, voluptuous lines and colors) and [[Nicolas Poussin]] (rational control, proportion, Roman classicism). There was also a strong [[Michelangelo Merisi|Caravaggio]] school represented in the period by the amazing candle-lit paintings of [[Georges de La Tour]]. The wretched and the poor were featured in an almost Dutch manner in the paintings by the three [[Le Nain brothers]]. In the paintings of [[Philippe de Champaigne]] there are both propagandistic portraits of [[Louis XIII of France|Louis XIII]]' s minister [[Cardinal Richelieu]] and other more contemplative portraits of people in the Catholic [[Jansenist]] sect. 
- 
-==Principal painters== 
-*[[Jean de Beaugrand]] (1584-1640)  
-*[[Georges de La Tour]] (1593-1652) 
-*[[Claude Lorrain]] (1600-1682) 
-*[[Le Nain]], [[Antoine Le Nain]] (c.1599-1648), 
-[[Louis Le Nain]] (c.1593-1648), and 
-[[Mathieu Le Nain]] (1607-1677) 
-*[[Hyacinthe Rigaud]] (1659-1743) 
-*[[Nicolas Poussin]] (1594-1665) 
-==Seventeenth century== 
-See also [[French Baroque and Classicism]], [[Louis XIII of France]], [[Cardinal Richelieu]], [[Baroque]], [[Louis XIV of France]], [[Palace of Versailles]], [[Classicism]] 
-*[[Jean de Beaugrand]] (1584-1640) [[lineographer]] 
-*[[Simon Vouet]] (1590-1649) painter 
-*[[Jacques Callot]] (1592-1635) (in Lorraine) engraver 
-*[[Georges de La Tour]] (1593-1652) painter 
-*[[Nicolas Poussin]] (1594-1665) painter 
-*[[Le Nain|Antoine Le Nain]] (before 1600-?) painter 
-*[[Le Nain|Louis Le Nain]] (after 1600-?) painter 
-*[[Abraham Bosse]] (1602-1676) engraver 
-*[[Claude Lorrain|Claude Gelée, called Claude Lorrain]] (1600-1682) painter 
-*[[Philippe de Champaigne]] (1602-1674) 
-*[[Laurent de La Hyre]] (1606-1565) painter 
-*[[Le Nain|Mathieu Le Nain]] (1607-c.1677) painter 
-*[[Pierre Mignard]] (1612-1695) painter 
-*[[Gaspard Dughet]] (1613-1675) French painter 
-*[[André Le Nôtre]] (1613-1700) Landscape architect 
-*[[Eustache Le Sueur]] (1616-1655) painter 
-*[[Sébastien Bourdon]] (1616-1671) painter 
-*[[Charles Le Brun]] (1619-1690) painter, other media 
-*[[Pierre Paul Puget]] (1620-1694) sculptor 
-*[[Guillaume Courtois]] (1628-1679) French painter and etcher 
-*[[Francois Girardon|François Girardon]] (1628-1715) sculptor 
-*[[Claude Lefebvre (artist)|Claude Lefebvre]] (1633-1675) painter and engraver 
-*[[Charles de La Fosse|Charles de la Fosse]] (1636-1716) painter 
-*[[Antoine Coysevox]] (1640-1720) sculptor 
-*[[Charles de La Fosse]] (1640-1716) French painter 
-*[[Étienne Allegrain]] (1644-1736) French topographical painter 
-*[[Jean Jouvenet]] (1644-1717) painter 
-*[[François de Troy]] (1645-1730) painter 
-*[[Nicolas de Largillière]] (1656-1746) painter 
-*[[Hyacinthe Rigaud]] (1659-1743) painter 
-*[[Antoine Coypel]] (1661-1722) sculptor 
-*[[François Desportes]] (1661-1743) painter 
 +'''Philippe de Champaigne''' (26 May 1602 - 12 August 1674) was a [[Flemish]]-born [[French people|French]] [[Baroque]] era painter, a major exponent of the [[French art|French school]].
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17th century art, French Baroque and Classicism


Philippe de Champaigne (26 May 1602 - 12 August 1674) was a Flemish-born French Baroque era painter, a major exponent of the French school.



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