Pierre-Charles Canot (c.1710–77) was a French engraver who spent most of his career in England.
Life
editCanot was born in France in about 1710. In 1740 he moved to England, where he lived there the rest of his life. He was elected an Associate Engraver of the Royal Academy in 1770, and died at Kentish Town, then just outside London, in 1777.[1] He engraved a large number of landscapes, sea-pieces, and other subjects after artists including Jan van Goyen, Lorrain and Jean Pillement. Joseph Strutt believed that his best prints were some large plates of maritime subjects after the works of Richard Paton.[2]
Works
editHis prints include:[1]
- A Slight Breeze after Bakhuisen.
- A Fresh Breeze after W. van de Velde.
- A Calm after W. van de Velde.
- A Storm after W. van de Velde.
- Returning from Market after P. de Laer.
- The Amorous Toper after D. Teniers.
- The Dutch Smokers after Teniers.
- The Dutch Cottage after Pillement.
- Autumn after Pillement.
- Winter after Pillement.
- A Dutch Merry-making after Ostade.
- Pyramus and Thisbe after L. Bramer.
- The Tempest after S. de Vliegher.
- An Italian Landscape after Gaspard Poussin.
- A Landscape—after Claude Lorrain.
- Sunrise, a marine after Claude Lorrain.
- Two pastoral subjects after Rosa da Tivoli.
- Views of Westminster Bridge and London Bridge after Scott.
- Seven fox-hunting subjects after Wootton.
- A true representation of Tower Hill as it appeared from a raised point of view from the north side on 18 August 1746, when the Earl of Kilmarnock and the Lord Balmerino were beheaded. [G Budd [ P C Canot ]
References
edit- ^ a b Bryan 1886
- ^ Strutt, Joseph (1786). "P.C. Canot". A Biographical Dictionary Containing All the Engravers, From the Earliest Period of the Art of Engraving to the Present Day. Vol. 1. London: Robert Faulder. p. 173.
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Sources
edit- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bryan, Michael (1886). "Canot, Pierre Charles". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). Vol. I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.