François Boitard

François Boitard (1670 c.1715) was a French Baroque artist.

Biography

Boitard was born in Toulouse. According to Houbraken he was a pupil of Raymond Lafage who later followed his style of making drawings and prints. He was able to attract a crowd in a tavern with his ingenious method of drawing a complicated version of the Pharaoh entering the Red Sea in two hours, from what appeared to be random scratches on a piece of paper. He copied this trick from Lafage, and Houbraken witnessed it himself in a tavern in London in 1709.[1]

According to the RKD he lived in Rome during the 1680s and is registered in London in 1709.[2] He drew many book illustrations and was the teacher of Jacques André Joseph Camellot Aved.[2] The engraver Louis Peter Boitard was his son.[3] He died in Amsterdam.

gollark: For now, anyway.
gollark: I disabled that using the seeeecret experiments menu.
gollark: I agree, they sometimes make good changes somehow.
gollark: I mean, the random constants are *not* easily memorable, but you can just check what they are from a REPL.
gollark: I also wrote a chat program in about 30 lines of easily memorable python which uses that convenient IPv4 broadcast address, because I wanted a version of my multicast chat thing which was less ridiculously fragile. So you could also plausibly cheat using that.

References

  1. (in Dutch) Raimond la Fage and Bauttard in Joan vander Brugge biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (1718) by Arnold Houbraken, courtesy of the Digital library for Dutch literature
  2. François Boitard in the RKD
  3. Clayton, Timothy; McConnell, Anita. "Boitard, Louis Peter". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/2784. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.