DREVET, Pierre


DREVET, Pierre

Artist

(b. 1663, Loire, d. 1738, Paris)

Details

French engraver, part of a family of engravers. The family gave the leading portrait engravers of France for over a hundred years. Their fame began with Pierre (called Pierre the Elder), and was sustained by his son, Pierre-Imbert (called Pierre the Younger, 1697-1739), and by his nephew, Claude (1705-1782). Pierre Drevet was born at Loire in the Lyonnais, the son of Estienne Drevet, and began his studies with Germain Audran in Lyons, continuing them with Gérard Audran in Paris. His progress was rapid, and in 1696 he was made court engraver. In 1707 he was admitted to membership in the Académie des Beaux-Arts, his reception picture being an engraving of Robert de Cotte. Hyacinthe Rigaud's portraits were in high favour at the end of the seventeenth century and Drevet was the first to encounter the difficulties of translating into black and white the natural appearance of texture and materials in the latter's oil paintings. Always engraving after oil-paintings, Drevet was at times uneven, but this was arguably because the originals were uneven. His engravings were mainly the portraits of distinguished people. Among his many plates are a portrait of Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1700); portraits of Louis XIV and Louis XV, both after Rigaud; a Crucifixion, after Coypel, and a portrait of Charles II of England. During the last years of his life Drevet worked with his son and they produced plates together. He died in Paris. //


Category Artists
Artists by letter D
Artist nationality French