Jean-Charles TARDIEU

(Paris 1765 - Paris 1830)

Portrait of the Artist’s Son

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Black chalk, with stumping, with framing lines in brown ink.
Oval.
Partly inscribed De Jean-Charles Tardieu / Portrait de son fils [illegible] in pencil on the old backing board.
A printed label from the artist supply shop Maison Belot, Rue de l’Arbe-Sec, Paris, on the backing board.
156 mm. (6 1/8 in.) diameter
 
Drawings by Jean-Charles Tardieu are rare. As noted in the old pencil inscription on the backing board, the cherubic young boy in this portrait drawing is one of the artist’s sons. Tardieu and his wife Prudence had three sons; Alexandre, born in 1803, Jules Romain, born in 1805, and Armand-Louis, born in 1807. All three were born in Rouen, and would go on to have successful literary and legal careers. (Jules-Romain Tardieu was perhaps the most prominent of the three, becoming a well-known publisher and author.) As the second half of the inscription has become illegible, however, it is not possible to determine which son is depicted in this charming, intimate portrait drawing, which may be dated to between c.1805 and 1810.

 
Jean-Charles Tardieu - also known as Tardieu-Cochin after the small legacy left to him by his father’s cousin, the printmaker and draughtsman Charles-Nicholas Cochin - was from a family of eminent engravers. His father Jacques-Nicolas Tardieu and paternal grandfather Nicolas-Henri Tardieu were both academicians and graveurs du roi, while his mother Claire Tournay and paternal grandmother Marie-Anne Horthemels were also professional engravers. Breaking with family tradition, however, Jean-Charles Tardieu trained as a history painter in the studio of the painter Jean-Baptiste Regnault between 1786 and 1789. He obtained second place in the Prix de Rome competition of 1790, and made his debut at the Salon three years later. Tardieu maintained a successful career through the successive upheavals and regime changes of the time, regularly exhibiting important paintings at the Salons. He enjoyed the patronage of Napoleon, Louis XVIII and Charles X, and received official commissions for various imperial and royal residences, such as the palaces of Luxembourg, Versailles, Saint-Cloud and Fontainebleau. Among his significant official commissions was a painting of The Emperor Napoleon Receives the Queen of Prussia at Tilsitt, exhibited at the Salon of 1808 and today at Versailles, while an allegorical painting on the birth of the Duc de Bordeaux was acquired by the city of Rouen at the Salon of 1822 and is now in the Musée des Beaux-Arts there. Tardieu also painted subjects from French history, such as Sully and Henri IV of 1805 and The Clemency of Louis XII of 1818. He also painted evocative genre scenes, notably a Market Scene in Paris, shown at the Salon of 1814 and today in the Louvre, as well as a handful of portraits, some of which were exhibited at the Salon of 1812.

Provenance

Talabardon & Gautier, Paris, in 2009.
 

Literature

Paris, Talabardon & Gautier, Le XIXe siècle, exhibition catalogue, 2009, unpaginated, no.4.

 

Exhibition

Paris, Talabardon & Gautier, Le XIXe siècle, 2009, no.4.

 

Jean-Charles TARDIEU

Portrait of the Artist’s Son