CARS, Laurent - b. 1699 Lyon, d. 1771 Paris - WGA

CARS, Laurent

(b. 1699 Lyon, d. 1771 Paris)

French printmaker, print publisher and print-seller. Early in his life his family removed to Paris. His father, Jean-François Cars (1661-1730), an engraver and publisher, was his first teacher. He next studied painting under Joseph Christophe (1662-1748) and François Lemoyne and then completed his studies in engraving under Nicolas-Henry Tardieu. In 1729 he was approved (agréé) by the Académie Royale and on 31 December 1733 was received (reçu), on presentation of the engraved portraits of Michel Anguier after Gabriel Revel and of Sébastien Bourdon after Hyacinthe Rigaud. From 1750 he gradually abandoned engraving in favour of print-selling, particularly those of his father’s collection. In 1757 he was appointed a Conseiller.

His work included nearly 190 prints; he engraved portraits, historical and mythological subjects after Lemoyne, such as Hercules and Omphale and the Bath of Iris, and genre subjects after Watteau, such as Figures de différents caractères and Fêtes vénitiennes (generally considered Cars’s masterpiece). He also engraved after Chardin (e.g. the Bird-song Organ) and Greuze, among others. Cars illustrated Molière’s Oeuvres with engravings after Boucher (1734) and Jean de la Fontaine’s Fables choisies after Oudry(1755-59). He also contributed prints to the Galerie de Versailles (1753).

He was among the best reproductive engravers of his time; his design was masterly and his handling fluid and expressive, and such contemporaries as Charles-Nicolas Cochin le fils and Louis-Simon Lempereur stressed that he was an interpreter and not merely a copyist. His numerous pupils included Jacques-Firmin Beauvarlet, Jean-Jacques Flipart, François Flipart and Augustin de Saint-Aubin. His portrait by Cochin was engraved in 1750 by Saint-Aubin; his portrait by Jean-Baptiste Perronneau was engraved in 1759 by Simon-Charles Miger (1736-1820).

'Escorte d'équipages'
'Escorte d'équipages' by

'Escorte d'équipages'

This engraving was made after a lost painting by Jean-Antoine Watteau. Watteau painted several compositions of military subject-matter most of which survived only in engravings. The ‘Escorte d’�quipages’ is the most sophisticated of these military scenes, organized into a microcosm which contains the experience not just of army life but of all life: at the centre of the camp, between flirting soldier and girl, and the cookpot suspended over a makeshift fire, at peace in contrast to the distant soldiers forming up around their commander, lies a sleeping baby.

The engraving of Laurent Cars catches a great deal of the lost painting.

Danzatori dell'opera
Danzatori dell'opera by

Danzatori dell'opera

This engraving, based on Lancret’s Camargo Dancing, was published by the Remondini di Bassano printing plant, which was famous throughout Europe in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

La Malade imaginaire
La Malade imaginaire by

La Malade imaginaire

This engraving was made after Boucher’s. It shows one of his compositions for the six-volume edition of Moli�re’s work.

Feedback