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Van Loo, a family
of painters of Flemish descent working in France, of whom the most important
were Jean Baptiste, Carle and Louis Michel.
Louis Michel
van Loo was the son of Jean Baptiste and the brother of three further
painters. Like his uncle Carle, who was only two years his elder, he was
Jean Baptiste's pupil in Turin and Rome, and he won a prize at the Academy
in Paris in 1725. With his uncle he went to Rome in 1727-32, but in 1736
he became court painter in Madrid where he painted many portraits. He
was a Founder-Member of the Academy in Madrid in 1752, but he returned
to Paris in 1753, and made many versions of the state portraits of Louis
XV for presentation to the Courts of Europe. In 1765 he succeeded his
uncle as Director of the special school of the French academy known as
the École Royale des Élèves Protégés.
Works
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