Gabriel Blanchard

{{short description|French painter}}

Image:Blanchard par Hyacinthe Rigaud.jpg, c. 1690]]

File:Salon de Diane-DIANE PROTEGEANT ARETHUSE CONTRE LE FLEUVE ALPHEE-porte.jpg in the Palace of Versailles.]]

Gabriel Blanchard, known as Blanchard Le Neveu, (1630 in Paris, France – 1704) the only son of Jacques Blanchard, was born in Paris in 1630, and studied under his uncle, Jean Baptiste Blanchard. He was, in 1668, elected Academician on the merits of an allegorical painting of the 'Birth of Louis XIV,' now at Versailles; but his most successful work was a picture of 'St. Andrew,' which he painted for the Goldsmiths' Guild. He became keeper of the royal collection, and successively assistant professor, professor, and, in 1699, treasurer of the Academy. He died in 1704. Two of his sons, Nicolas and Philippe Thomas, were likewise painters.

{{commons category|Gabriel Blanchard}}

References

  • {{Bryan (3rd edition)|title=Blanchard, Gabriel |volume=1}}

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Category:17th-century French painters

Category:French male painters

Category:18th-century French painters

Category:1630 births

Category:1704 deaths

Category:Painters from Paris

Category:18th-century French male artists

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