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François Quesnel

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Portrait of Henri III of France, ca. 1582-86[1] attributed to Quesnel (Musée du Louvre)

François Quesnel (ca. 1543 — 1619) was a French painter of Scottish extraction.

The son of the French painter Pierre Quesnel and his Scottish wife Madeleine Digby, born in Edinburgh while his father worked for Mary of Guise,[2] Quesnel found patronage at the French court of Catherine de Medici[3] and her son, Henri III (illustration). He married Charlotte Richandeau, with whom he had four children. A widower, he remarried in 1584 Marguerite Le Masson, who gave him ten more children, among whom were Nicolas and Augustin, painters, and Jacques, bookseller.

Portrait, possibly of Catherine-Charlotte de la Trémoille, ca 1589, attributed to Quesnel

In Paris he worked as a decorator and a designer of cartoons for tapestry, but it is as a portrait painter, both in oils and in delicately tinted pencil or red and black chalk he is chiefly remembered. Some portraits were engraved Thomas de Leu and Michel Lasne, and in 1609 he drew a map of Paris for engraving by Pierre Vallet.[4] He died in Paris.

Notes

  1. ^ The King wear the cordon bleu of his Ordre du Saint-Esprit, inaugurated in 1578 (Louvre Museum database).
  2. ^ Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majesty, Birlinn (2005), 85.
  3. ^ See Catherine de' Medici's patronage of the arts.
  4. ^ Brugerolles & Guillet, The Renaissance in France, (1995), 212-215.