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Natoire, Charles-Joseph
(b Nîmes, 3 March 1700; d Castel Gandolfo, 23 or 29 Aug 1777). French painter, draughtsman and teacher, active also in Italy. An exact contemporary of François Boucher, he was a painter of cabinet pictures, decorations and tapestry cartoons and one of the most adept practitioners of Rococo art in 18th-century France. The greater part of his career was spent in Paris, where he received important commissions from Louis XV as well as from private patrons. In 1751 he accepted the post of Director of the Académie de France in Rome. From then on he devoted himself to his teaching duties at the expense of his painting.
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- Natoire, Charles-Joseph
- patrons and collectors
- pupils
- Desfriches, Aignan-Thomas
- Drouais: (2) François-Hubert Drouais
- Greuze, Jean-Baptiste, §1(i): Training and early years, to 1755
- Guibal: (2) Nicolas Guibal
- Mannlich, Johann Christian von
- Pierre, Jean-Baptiste
- Ramsay, Allan, §1: Early years in Edinburgh and London and first visits to Italy, 171357
- Vien, Joseph-Marie, §1: Early career, to 1775
- reproductive prints by others
- teachers
- works
- Beauvais, §2: Centre of tapestry production
- Borghese Gladiator
- Compiègne
- France, §III, 4(i): Painting & graphic arts, c 1715c 1814: Rise of the Rococo
- France, §V, 4: Interior decoration, 17231815
- Hôtel particulier, §2: Interior decoration
- Le Roux, Jean-Baptiste
- Paris, §III, 3: Art life and organization, 171588
- Rococo, §II, 3: France: Genre pittoresque or rocaille, after c 1730
- Watercolour, §2(ii): Mid-18th century19th
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