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French painters, brothers
(Antoine, d. 1648, Louis, d. 1648, Mathieu, c. 1607-1677), who were born
at Laon but had all moved to Paris by 1630. The traditional birth-dates
for Antoine and Louis are 1588 and 1593, respectively, but it is now thought
that they were born shortly before and shortly after 1600, so that all
three brothers were of much the same generation.
Mathieu was
made painter to the city of Paris in 1633, and all three were foundation
members of the Academy in 1648. Apart from this, little is known of their
careers and the assigning of works to one or the other of them is fraught
with difficulty and controversy, for such paintings as are signed bear
only their surname, and of those that are dated none is later than 1648,
when all were still alive. The finest and most original works associated
with the brothers - powerful and dignified genre scenes of peasants -
are conventionally given to Louis; Antoine is credited with a group of
small-scale and richly coloured family scenes, mainly on copper; and in
a third group, attributed to Mathieu, are paintings of more eclectic style,
chiefly portraits and group portraits in a manner suggesting influence
from Holland. The brothers are also said to have collaborated on religious
works. Examples of all three types are in the Louvre. In
1978-79 a major exhibition in Paris brought together most of the pictures
associated with the brothers, but it raised as many problems as it solved.
It also confirmed the stature of Louis, whose sympathetic and unaffected
peasant scenes are the main reason why the Le Nains have attracted so
much attention. It has recently been proposed that the traditional description
of the figures in these paintings as 'peasants' is a misnomer (they are
said to be too well dressed for that) and that in fact they represent
members of the bourgeoisie.
Works
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