CORNEILLE, Michel I - b. ~1601 Orléans, d. 1664 Paris - WGA

CORNEILLE, Michel I

(b. ~1601 Orléans, d. 1664 Paris)

Painter, part of a French family of artists. Originally from Orléans, Michel Corneille I established himself in Paris as a painter of religious pictures, although he also carried out some interior decorations as well as cartoons for tapestries. He was a founder-member of the Académie Royale in 1648. His elder son, Michel Corneille II (1642-1708), who became the family’s most successful member, was a prolific artist; like his younger brother Jean-Baptiste Corneille (1649-1695), he concentrated on religious pictures for both private and ecclesiastical patrons. Both these sons also practised as engravers.

Michel Corneille I studied in the studio of Simon Vouet in Paris and became friends with Eustache Le Sueur, François Perrier and other leading artists in the capital; with his marriage in 1636 he became son-in-law to the sculptor Jacques Sarazin. Michel’s first signed painting, however, Esau Yielding his Birthright to Jacob (1630; Orléans, Musée des Beaux-Arts), shows no signs of Vouet’s influence. On the contrary, the realism of what is in effect a genre scene with an entirely imaginative basis relates it to the Flemish followers of Caravaggio, for example Pieter Lastman or the Pynas family, although as a whole the work recalls that of the Le Nain brothers. By turns attributed to Jacques Blanchard, Joachim Wtewael and an anonymous Flemish artist, this odd and disconcerting work is an unusual example of an artist in search of a personal style.

The other paintings attributed to Michel show, however, unmistakable signs of Vouet’s influence. This can be seen in the two Mays (the altarpieces commissioned annually by the goldsmiths’ corporation of Paris) he painted for Notre-Dame, Paris: SS Paul and Barnabas at Lystra (1644; Arras, Musée des Beaux-Arts) and St Peter Baptizing the Centurion (1658; Toulouse, St Pierre). Together with a Visitation (Blois, Musée Municipal), all these works are well-balanced compositions in which architecture plays a large part, with full forms and light tonality-features that testify to Michel’s admiration for Raphael. Attribution of his other pictures is often contested: the father’s work is frequently confused with that of his sons, Michel Corneille II and Jean-Baptiste Corneille.

Esau and Jacob
Esau and Jacob by

Esau and Jacob

During the reign of Louis XIII, fashion, especially male dresses, played a very important role. This is reflected in both contemporary paintings and engravings. In Corneille’s Biblical scene the hunter Esau is addressing clever Jacob in a contemporary bourgeois home. It can be considered a costume study which underscores Esau’s elegant garb in the twin light coming from the open door and the glowing fire in the monumental fireplace.

Marriage of the Virgin
Marriage of the Virgin by

Marriage of the Virgin

Corneille was primarily a painter of religious subjects. He also produced cartoons for tapestries. The size and format of the present painting, and the large scale of the figures set against carefully delineated Solomonic columns, indicates that it was most probably a design for a tapestry.

Portrait of Philippe of France, Duke of Orléans
Portrait of Philippe of France, Duke of Orléans by

Portrait of Philippe of France, Duke of Orléans

The sitter of this portrait is Philippe of France, Duke of Orl�ans (1640-1701), the younger son of Louis XIII of France and his wife, Anne of Austria, brother of Louis XIV, wearing armour with fleur-de-lys of the Sash of the Order of the Holy Spirit.

During the reign of his brother he was known simply as Monsieur, the traditional style at the court of France for the younger brother of the king. He married twice fathering several children, thus founding the House of Orl�ans, a cadet branch of the ruling House of Bourbon.

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