Charles François Hutin

Woman in an armchair, National Museum, Warsaw

Charles François Hutin (4 July 1715 in Paris – 29 July 1776 in Dresden) was a French history and figure painter, engraver and sculptor. He became director of the Royal Academy of Arts in Dresden.

Life and work

Hutin was born in Paris in 1715. He studied painting under Francois Le Moine, and in his twenty-first year obtained the grand prize for historical painting, and went to Rome, where he spent seven years. There he studied sculpture with René-Michel Slodtz. After his return to Paris in 1746, he was received into the Royal Academy. To gain admission he executed a sculpture as his presentation piece ("morceau de reception") and this attracted the attention of the Elector of Saxony, who invited him to come to Dresden in 1748; he went there with his brother Pierre Hutin. There, he made copies of the paintings in the gallery which were published in two volumes called 'Dresden Gallery (1753–57); his brother, Pierre, also contributed some drawings. The plates for this publication were engraved in Paris between 1750 and 1756 and over 20 engravers contributed.

In 1764, he became director of the Dresden Royal Academy of Arts. He executed an altar painting of the crucifixion in the Katholische Hofkirche in Dresden, and, in one of the chapels behind the main altar, a fresco ceiling. Of his engravings there are in particular thirty-five plates, entitled Recueil de different Sujets composee poses et graves par Charles Hutin, Dresden, 1763.

Hutin died in Dresden on 29 July 1776.

References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.