MERCIER, Philip - b. ~1689 Berlin, d. 1760 London - WGA

MERCIER, Philip

(b. ~1689 Berlin, d. 1760 London)

French painter and etcher, active in England. He was an important painter of great ability who was one of the first in England to adopt the work of Watteau (from 1720) to produce the conversation piece (in 1725) and to coin the domestic ‘fancy’ picture (from 1737).

Philip Mercier was born in Berlin of French extraction, son of a Huguenot tapestry-worker. Mercier studied painting at the Berlin Akademie and under Antoine Pesne, who had arrived in Berlin in 1710, and afterwards he travelled in Italy and France before arriving in London - recommended by the Court at Hannover - probably in 1716. He married in London in 1719 and lived in Leicester Fields.

Nothing is known of his activity before he went to London, he is generally accepted as an English artist whose pleasant and often surprising work resulted from a naturally French inclination being modified by an English environment.

His style developed through clearly defined stages, the engravings and pastiches of Watteau, the conversation piece, which was virtually an Anglicisation of the Féte Galante, the court painter portraits and other commissions for Frederick, Prince of Wales, the first of the Hanoverians to declare a taste in the arts and finally the fancy pictures and portraits produced in some quantity for provincial patrons.

Stylistically the development was gradual from the delicate rococo-fantasy of Watteau towards a more substantial, middle class interpretation of Chardin.

A Boy Drawing at His Desk
A Boy Drawing at His Desk by

A Boy Drawing at His Desk

Mercier is credited with bringing the French style of genre and conversation painting to England. The present painting shows the influence of Chardin.

Elegant Couples Conversing
Elegant Couples Conversing by

Elegant Couples Conversing

This conversation piece is a good example showing the influence of Watteau on Mercier.

School for Girls
School for Girls by

School for Girls

There is a pendant to this picture entitled School for Boys. These two pictures were significant examples of the type of large scale genre compositions with which Mercier experimented in his English years.

The Drawing Lesson
The Drawing Lesson by

The Drawing Lesson

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