Louise Marie-Jeanne Hersent-Mauduit

Louise Marie-Jeanne Hersent-Mauduit (7 March 1784 – 7 January 1862) was a French oil painter, primarily of portraits and historical scenes.[1]

Louise Marie-Jeanne Hersent-Mauduit
1835 portrait of Hersent by Louise Adélaïde Desnos, one of her students
Born
Louise Marie Jeanne Mauduit

(1784-03-07)7 March 1784
Died7 January 1862(1862-01-07) (aged 77)
Paris
NationalityFrench
SpouseLouis Hersent

From 1810 to 1824, her works were exhibited at the Paris Salon, and she received two first-class medals in 1817 and 1819.[1][2] Jean Baptiste Tardieu engraved several of her works.[1][2]

Biography

Louise Marie-Jeanne Mauduit was born in Paris on 7 March 1784 to an unknown mother and Antoine-René Mauduit, an architect and mathematician.[1]

In 1810, her works were first displayed at the Paris Salon, and would be displayed until 1824. Her artworks obtained first-class medals in 1817 and 1819.[1][2]

She studied under Charles Meynier and possibly her husband, Louis Hersent.

In 1821, she married the painter Louis Hersent.[3] Her husband is also notable for his portrait and history paintings.[2]

Hersent herself took on female pupils, among them the porcelain painter Marie Virginie Boquet[3] and portrait painter Louise Adélaïde Desnos.

References

  1. Bénézit, Emmanuel (1924). Dictionnaire Critique Et Documentaire Des Peintres, Sculpteurs, Dessinateurs & Graveurs de Tous Les Temps Et de Tous Les Pays: D-K (in French). R. Roger et F. Chernoviz.
  2. Mauduit mentioned in biography of her husband Louis Hersent, by Michael Bryan
  3. Louise Marie Jeanne Hersent-Mauduit in the RKD
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