Gérard Edelinck
Painting, Visual Artist
1640 – 1707
Who was Gérard Edelinck?
Gérard Edelinck was a copper-plate engraver and print publisher of Flemish origin, who worked in Paris from 1666 and became a naturalized French citizen in 1675.
Edelinck was born in Antwerp, where he received his early training under the engravers Gaspar Huybrechts and Cornelius Galle the Younger. He went to Paris in 1666, where he worked with his fellow Fleming Nicolas Pitau the elder, and then to improve himself further studied under François de Poilly, Robert Nanteuil, and Philippe de Champaigne. These masters likewise had soon done all they could to help him onwards, and Edelinck ultimately took the first rank among line engravers.
His excellence was generally acknowledged; and having become known to Louis XIV he was appointed, on the recommendation of Le Brun, teacher at the academy established at the Gobelins manufactory for the training of workers in tapestry. He was also entrusted with the execution of several important works. In 1677 he won admission to the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture with his Portrait of Philippe de Champaigne, engraved after a self-portrait.
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