VLEUGHELS, Nicolas - b. 1668 Paris, d. 1737 Roma - WGA

VLEUGHELS, Nicolas

(b. 1668 Paris, d. 1737 Roma)

French painter of Flemish origin. He trained with his father Philippe Vleughels (1620-94), a Flemish painter who had moved to Paris in 1642; he was also a pupil of Pierre Mignard I. In 1694 he came second in the Prix de Rome competition with Lot and his Daughters Leaving Sodom (untraced); despite repeated attempts, he failed to win the first prize. He became a close friend of Watteau and was, like him, greatly influenced by Flemish painting, notably that of Rubens.

In 1704 Vleughels travelled to Italy at his own expense. From his base in Rome he made trips to Venice (1707-09) and Modena (1712-14) and was much influenced by the work of the Venetian colourists, particularly Veronese, whose works he copied (drawings in the Musée du Louvre, Paris). In 1716, back in Paris, he was approved (agréé) by the Académie Royale and in the same year was received (reçu) on presentation of Apelles Painting Campaspe (Musée du Louvre, Paris) as his morceau de réception. The influence of Veronese can be seen in the preparatory studies in oil and pastel for his paintings of this period, such as the Studies of a Woman’s Legs (Musée du Louvre, Paris) for the figure of Campaspe. His close relationship to Watteau’s fètes galantes can be seen in the Abduction of Helen (c. 1716; private collection).

From 1724 until his death he was director of the French Academy in Rome.

Apelles Painting Campaspe
Apelles Painting Campaspe by

Apelles Painting Campaspe

Apelles, the celebrated painter of ancient Greece, was court painter to Alexander the Great. The elder Pliny (Nat. Hist. 35:36) tells how Apelles was engaged by the emperor to paint his favourite concubine, the beautiful Campaspe, and how while doing so he fell in love with her. Alexander, as a mark of his appreciation of the painter’s work, made him a present of her.

Holy Family
Holy Family by
Self-Portrait
Self-Portrait by

Self-Portrait

This portrait appears to have been drawn shortly after Vleughels’s return to Paris from Italy where he lived from 1703 to 1713, spending the first three years in Rome then two in Venice where he met Rosalba Carriera and discovered the medium of pastels, before returning to Rome in 1709 and subsequently taking up residence in Modena in 1712-13.

This self-portrait shows the artist younger than he appears in the drawings of him done by Antoine Watteau with whom he shared lodgings from 1716 to 1718, Vleughels eventually returned to Rome, where in 1727 he was appointed director of the Acad�mie that the French king had established there in 1666.

Study for the Head of Campaspe
Study for the Head of Campaspe by

Study for the Head of Campaspe

Study for the Legs of Campaspe
Study for the Legs of Campaspe by

Study for the Legs of Campaspe

The Return of the Prodigal Son
The Return of the Prodigal Son by

The Return of the Prodigal Son

Venus and the Three Graces Tending Cupid
Venus and the Three Graces Tending Cupid by

Venus and the Three Graces Tending Cupid

The painting is signed in monogram and dated, on the headboard, centre: N V 1725.

Young Woman with a Nude Back Presenting a Bowl
Young Woman with a Nude Back Presenting a Bowl by

Young Woman with a Nude Back Presenting a Bowl

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