I had forgotten that Madame Campan had a son. An interesting story from Art Daily.
STOCKHOLM.-
Nationalmuseum’s collection of Swedish-French paintings from the 18th
century now includes a portrait painted by Adolf Ulrik Wertmüller. It
depicts Henri Bertholet-Campan, the son of the French Queen’s First Lady
of the Bedchamber Henriette Genet-Campan. The acquisition adds an
important piece to the fascinating puzzle of Wertmüller’s portrait of
Marie Antoinette.
Painted in autumn 1786, the portrait depicts the two-year-old Henri
Bertholet-Campan with his dog Aline in the English landscape garden at
the family’s summer house in Croissy outside Paris. The painting was
exhibited at the Salon of 1787, but under the rather anonymous title of A
child playing with a dog.
Adolf Ulrik Wertmüller (1751–1811) trained under his second cousin
Alexander Roslin in Paris and studied at the French Academy in Rome.
When Wertmüller returned to the French capital in spring 1781, he found
it difficult to obtain work as a portraitist and instead earned his keep
as a copyist at Roslin’s studio. Here he was discovered by the Swedish
Ambassador Gustaf Filip Creutz, who made several important commissions.
This in turn resulted in Gustav III convincing France’s Queen Marie
Antoinette, during his stay in Paris in the summer of 1784, to let
Wertmüller paint her portrait as a gift to the Swedish King. The
portrait is currently held in the collections of Nationalmuseum.
King Gustav III had intended this to be Wertmüller’s ticket to a
successful career in Paris, but jealousies abounded. When the portrait
of Marie Antoinette was exhibited in August 1785, it was attacked by the
critics. The Queen was also unimpressed. The artist fell into a deep
depression, but recovered enough to make the necessary changes before
the portrait was dispatched to Sweden the following year. It was
Wertmüller’s friend Henriette Genet-Campan who came to his aid. The fact
that Wertmüller even got paid was largely down to Mme Campan, since she
managed the Queen’s purse and was intimately involved in the royal
finances. For security reasons a mutual friend, Gabriel Lindblom, acted
as a go-between in contact between the two. Lindblom had been governor
to Mme Campan’s younger brother Edmond Genet and served as an
interpreter at the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Versailles.
This explains why Wertmüller was so well informed and why he came to
paint almost a dozen portraits of various members of the Genet-Campan
family.
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More Information: http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=63730#.UeX8Eti-X1U[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
STOCKHOLM.-
Nationalmuseum’s collection of Swedish-French paintings from the 18th
century now includes a portrait painted by Adolf Ulrik Wertmüller. It
depicts Henri Bertholet-Campan, the son of the French Queen’s First Lady
of the Bedchamber Henriette Genet-Campan. The acquisition adds an
important piece to the fascinating puzzle of Wertmüller’s portrait of
Marie Antoinette.
Painted in autumn 1786, the portrait depicts the two-year-old Henri
Bertholet-Campan with his dog Aline in the English landscape garden at
the family’s summer house in Croissy outside Paris. The painting was
exhibited at the Salon of 1787, but under the rather anonymous title of A
child playing with a dog.
Adolf Ulrik Wertmüller (1751–1811) trained under his second cousin
Alexander Roslin in Paris and studied at the French Academy in Rome.
When Wertmüller returned to the French capital in spring 1781, he found
it difficult to obtain work as a portraitist and instead earned his keep
as a copyist at Roslin’s studio. Here he was discovered by the Swedish
Ambassador Gustaf Filip Creutz, who made several important commissions.
This in turn resulted in Gustav III convincing France’s Queen Marie
Antoinette, during his stay in Paris in the summer of 1784, to let
Wertmüller paint her portrait as a gift to the Swedish King. The
portrait is currently held in the collections of Nationalmuseum.
More Information: http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=63730#.UeX8Eti-X1U[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.or
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More Information: http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=63730#.UeX8Eti-X1U[/url]
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