Nicolas de Largillière (; baptised 10 October 1656 – 20 March 1746) was a French painter and draughtsman. From 1733 until 1735, he was director of the Académie de Peinture et de Sculpture.
Biography
Early life
Largillière was baptised at the in Paris on 10 October 1656. The son of a merchant hatmaker, his family moved to Antwerp when Largillière was around three years old. Following a trip to London, Largillière's father apprenticed him to the Flemish painter Anton Goubau. However, he left at the age of eighteen and again went to England, where he was befriended and employed by Sir Peter Lely for four years at Windsor, Berkshire. While there, Largillière also worked under the direction of Italian painter Antonio Verrio. The portrait shows Le Brun, then the chairman of the academy, at work on an entombment, surrounded by classical busts and figurines scattered upon the floor and table within the picture. Le Brun, impressed by Largillière's portrait, accepted him to the academy. In 1690, Largillière was documented by the French Academy as a historical painter, which was a prominent artistic trend of the academy.
In 1693, Largillière painted the Governor of Arras, Pierre de Montesquiou, to celebrate his promotion to brigadier in 1691.
In 1694, Largillière's made a multi-figure work that is displayed in the church of Saint-Étienne-du-Mont.
In 1709, Largillière painted the royal family portrait of The Family of Louis XIV. This portrait shows King Louis XIV, Madame de Ventadour (governess of the children of the Duke of Burgundy), the 3-year old Louis, Duke of Brittany, Louis, Grand Dauphin and Louis, Duke of Burgundy, future dauphin. The King displays a sense of slight uneasiness unlike the other figures especially. In the painting, Largillière used the Renaissance technique of structured disposition.
left|thumb|Charles LeBrun (1686)
A year later, Largillière painted a self-portrait which also contained two female members of his family.
Following the death of directeur Louis de Boullogne on 28 November 1733, the painter Hyacinthe Rigaud proposed that the four rectors of the Académie, Largillière, Claude-Guy Hallé, Guillaume Coustou, and himself, rotate the post. This oligarchy would persist until the election of Coustou as sole director on 5 February 1735. Largillière became director in 1738 and remained in that position until 1742.
Later career
thumb|left|200px|Self-portrait of Nicolas de Largillierre.<br />Engraving by [[François Chereau (1715).]]
thumb|right|200px|Study of hands<br />([[Musée du Louvre)]]
Towards the end of his life, Largillière painted a repetition of anonymous male portraits of Parisian nobles. One example was painted in 1710, of a man standing with spread fingers that conceal a letter held in the other hand. Another portrait from about 1715 shows a frontal three quarter view of a man dressed in similar clothes and wig with a Doric column in the background.
In 1714, Largillière painted King Augustus II the Strong of Poland. Largillière also painted the artist Jacques-Antoine Arlaud in a red robe in a similar fashion to Largillière's portrait of the painter Charles Le Brun, as well as the sculptor Nicolas Couston. Around the next year, Largillière painted The Study of Different Types of Hands, which currently resides in the Louvre.
In 1718, Largillière painted the French poet and essayist Voltaire.
The Entry of Christ into Jerusalem was a landscape painting that Largillière painted in 1720.
Largillière made his last self-portrait in 1725. This portrait displays the artist at his easel staring toward the audience.
Largillière was appointed as chancellor of the French Academy in 1743.
Death
Nicolas de Largillière died on 20 March 1746 at the age of 89. Upon his death, he donated to France several small landscapes and still life pictures he had created.
Legacy
The Ashmolean Museum (University of Oxford), the Fitzwilliam Museum (University of Cambridge), the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City), the Honolulu Museum of Art, the Louvre, the National Gallery of Art (Washington D.C.), the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (Kansas City, Missouri), the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Strasbourg and Pinacoteca di Brera (Milan), Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga (Lisbon), Museum de Fundatie (Zwolle), the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit) and the Speed Art Museum (Louisville) are among the public collections holding works by Nicolas de Largillière.
Jean-Baptiste Oudry and Jacob van Schuppen, Largillière's pupil and nephew respectively, were also rococo painters.
Gallery
<gallery class="center">
Image:Elizabeth Throckmorton.JPG|Portrait of Elizabeth Throckmorton
Image:Augustus III of Poland.jpg|Portrait of Augustus III of Poland
Image:Portrait of the Comtesse de Montchal (1715-1793).jpg|Portrait of Louise-Madeleine Bertin, Countess of Montchal
Image:LARGILLIÈRE man in purper.jpg|Portrait of a Man in a Purple Robe
Image:Nicolas de Largillière, François-Marie Arouet dit Voltaire (vers 1724-1725) -001.jpg|Portrait of Voltaire
Image:Nicolas de Largillière 004.jpg|Self-portrait with family
File:Nicolas de Largillière - Retrato de Marguerite de Sève.jpg|Portrait of Marguerite de Sève
Largillierre belle Strasbourgeoise mba mb.jpg| (1703)
Image:BECAILLE, Marguerite.jpg|Portrait of Marguerite Bécaille
Image:Titon de Cogny.jpg|Portrait of Pierre-Joseph Titon de Cogny
Image:Image-Mme. Titon de Cogny.jpg|Portrait of Jeanne-Cécile Le Guay de Montgermon
File:Nicolas de Largillière - Portrait of Catherine Coustard (1673-1728), Marquise of Castelnau, Wife of Charles-Léonor Aubry (1667-1735) with her Son Léonor (1695-1770) - 77.26 - Minneapolis Institute of Arts.jpg|Portrait of Catherine Coustard with her son Léonor, Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Image:Nicolas de Largillière 002.jpg|Portrait of Maria Theresia Countess of Wrbna born Countess of Kollonitz, often wrongly descripted as a portrait of French jeweller Jean-Baptiste Tavernier
Image:Portrait of an officer, oil on canvas painting by Nicolas de Largillière, 1714-15, Art Gallery of New South Wales.jpg|Portrait of an officer, oil on canvas, 1714–15, Art Gallery of New South Wales
File:Largilliere, Nicolas de & Jean-Baptiste Belin de Fontenay - Helene Lambert de Thorigny, c. 1696-1700, oil on canvas, 63 x 45 in.jpg|Oil on canvas portrait of Helene Lambert de Thorigny by Nicolas de Largillière (portrait) and Jean-Baptiste Belin (flowers), –1700, 63 × 45 in., Honolulu Museum of Art
File:María Ana Victoria de Borbón.jpg|Infanta Mariana Victoria of Spain, one-time fiancée of Louis XV
File:Anne Geneviève de Lévis par Nicolas de Largillière.jpg|Anne Geneviève de Lévis, duchessede Rohan-Rohan by marriage and only daughter of Madame de Ventadour
Image:Nicolas de Largillière An Alderman of Paris.JPG|An Alderman of Paris, 1703, oil on canvas, The Detroit Institute of Arts
File:Largillière Portrait of a lady.jpg|Portrait of a lady with a dog and a monkey (1700–1710)
File:André François Alloys de Theys d'Herculais (1692–1779).jpg|André François Alloys de Theys d'Herculais (1692–1779), in the Metropolitan Museum of Art
File:Thomas Germain and Anne-Denise Gauchelet by Nicolas de Largillierre (1736).png|Portrait of Thomas Germain and his wife Anne-Denise Gauchelet in 1736
File:Nicolas de Largillière - Retrato de Barthélemy-Jean-Claude Pupil.jpg|Portrait of Barthélemy-Jean-Claude Pupil, 1729, Timken Museum of Art, San Diego
</gallery>
