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(5) Jean Audran
(b Lyon, 28 April 1667; d Paris, 17 June 1756). Engraver, brother of (3) Claude Audran III. He studied engraving in Paris with his uncle (2) Girard Audran, whose collaborator he became, most notably on the reproductive engravings of Charles Le Bruns Battles of Alexander the Great. Jean Audran made engravings after Italian masters, such as Pietro da Cortona, Francesco Albani and the Carracci family, and after 17th-century French masters, including Nicolas Poussin, Jean Jouvenet, Antoine Dieu, Antoine Coypel and Hyacinthe Rigaud. Later he reproduced works by more modern painters, such as Claude Gillot or Watteau, making 110 etchings for the latters Figures de différents caractères (c. 1735). Jeans numerous works, like those of his uncle, often harmoniously combine etching and line engraving. In 1707 he was appointed Graveur Ordinaire du Roi; having been approved (agréé) by the Académie Royale in 1704, he was admitted (reçu) in 1708, with engravings of a portrait of Antoine Coyzevox after Rigaud and of a Self-portrait after Noël Coypel.
Part of the Audran family
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