Pierre-Imbert Drevet,
Bishop Jacques-Benigne
Bossuet, an engraving
France, AD 1723
After a painting by Hyacinthe
Rigaud
The steady demand for engraved portraits of men
prominent in public life led to a formidable accumulation of
technical skills among French eighteenth-century engravers. Pierre
Drevet was appointed Graveur du Roi
('Engraver to the King') in
1696, but his son Pierre-Imbert (1697-1739), who achieved the same
position in 1729, surpassed him in virtuosity. This signed and
dated portrait has always been regarded by print connoisseurs as a
supreme example of the engraver's
art.
Rigaud's
painting displays the bishop in the grand manner, before a
classical column enlivened by cascading drapery and distant clouds.
Drevet's ability to conjure from engraved lines the very
stuff of fabrics, the satins, velvets, furs and cotton falling over
the body in light and shadow, is astounding. The deep border of
richly worked lace trimming the bishop's surplice is
mesmerizing in its illusionism. On the crumpled pages of the open
books, which symbolize the bishop's erudition, intricate
shadows and reflected lights are captured by Drevet's
burin
without apparent
difficulty.
Rigaud
(1659-1743) had been the principal painter to the court of Louis
XIV, and painted an average of thirty-five portraits a year for
sixty-two years. By contrast the younger Drevet had engraved just
thirty-three plates before insanity put an end to his career in
1726 at the age of twenty-nine.
A. Griffiths (ed.), Landmarks in print collecting (London, The British Museum Press)