Saturday, 2 May 2015

ART SUNDAY - PHILIPPE DE CHAMPAIGNE

“Every man’s work, whether it be literature, or music or pictures or architecture or anything else, is always a portrait of himself.” - Samuel Butler

Philippe de Champaigne, (26 May 1602 – 12 August 1674), was a Brabançon-born French Baroque era painter, a major exponent of the French school. He was a founding member of the Académie de Peinture et de Sculpture. Born of a poor family in Brussels (Duchy of Brabant, Southern Netherlands), during the reign of the Archduke Albert and Isabella, Champaigne was a pupil of the landscape painter Jacques Fouquières.

In 1621 he moved to Paris, where he worked with Nicolas Poussin on the decoration of the Palais du Luxembourg under the direction of Nicolas Duchesne, whose daughter he married. According to Houbraken, Duchesne was angry at Champaigne for becoming more popular than he was at court, and this is why Champaigne returned to Brussels to live with his brother. It was only after he received news of Duchesne’s death that he returned to marry his daughter.

After the death of Duchesne, Champaigne worked for the Queen Mother, Marie de Medicis, for whom he participated in the decoration of the Luxembourg Palace. He made several paintings for the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, dating from 1638. He also drew several cartoons for tapestries. He was made first painter of the Queen with a pension of 1200 pounds. He also decorated the Carmelite Church of Faubourg Saint-Jacques, one of the favorite churches of the Queen Mother. This site was destroyed during the French Revolution, but there are several paintings now preserved in museums, that were part of the original design (The Presentation in the Temple is in Dijon, the Resurrection of Lazarus is in Grenoble and the Assumption of the Virgin is in the Louvre).

He also worked for Cardinal Richelieu, for whom he decorated the Palais Cardinal, the dome of the Sorbonne and other buildings. Champaigne was the only artist who was allowed to paint Richelieu enrobed as a cardinal, which he did eleven times. He was a founding member of the Académie de Peinture et de Sculpture in 1648. Later in his life (from 1640 onwards), he came under the influence of Jansenism. After his paralysed daughter was allegedly miraculously cured at the nunnery of Port-Royal, he painted the celebrated but atypical picture Ex-Voto de 1662, now in the Louvre, which represents the artist’s daughter with Mother-Superior Agnès Arnauld.

Champaigne produced a very large number of paintings, mainly religious works and portraits. Influenced by Rubens at the beginning of his career, his style later became more austere. Philippe de Champaigne remains an exceptional painter thanks to the brilliance of the colours in his paintings and the stern strength of his compositions. He portrayed the entire French court, the French high nobility, royalty, high members of the church and the state, parliamentarians and architects, and other notable people. In depicting their faces, he refused to show a transitory expression, instead capturing the psychological essence of the person.

His works can be seen in public buildings, private collections, churches such as Val-de-Grâce, Sorbonne, Saint Severin, Saint-Merry, Saint-Médard and in the Basilica of Notre-Dame du Port in Clermont-Ferrand. Champaigne was prominent enough in his time as to be mentioned in Cyrano de Bergerac in a line by Ragueneau referencing Cyrano: “Truly, I should not look to find his portrait By the grave hand of Philippe de Champagne.” His pupils were his nephew Jean Baptiste de Champaigne, William Faithorne, Jean Morin, and Nicolas de Plattemontagne. During his last period Champaigne painted mainly religious subjects and family members. He died in Paris in 1674.

The painting above is “The Denarius of Caesar” (138.5 x 188 cm), painted around 1664 and is in the Musée des Beaux Arts de Montréal in Canada. It depicts the episode recounted in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke. A group of Pharisees set a trap for Jesus who is teaching in the Temple in Jerusalem, asking whether it is right to pay taxes to Rome. The refusal would offend the Roman authorities, while a positive answer might offend Jews, who have never accepted the occupation. Showing the image of Caesar on a denarius, Jesus said: “Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s.” This mature work acknowledging Raphael, borrows classic elements, while its formal rigour reflects Champaigne’s debt to Poussin. Given these life-size figures, the viewer can imagine being amongst the actors in the scene. The figure appearing on the far right is clearly a portrait, perhaps a self-portrait of the artist.

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