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See also: born at See also: Geneva, a member of a Burgundian See also: family which had fled from See also: France on account of religious difficulties
.
His See also: father, Faulle, was a See also: wood carver; his See also: mother's name was Etienette Royaume
.
See also: Jean was the See also: fourth son, and was apprenticed to a jeweller goldsmith named See also: Pierre Bordier, with whom he struck up a close friendship
.
The two See also: friends, dissatisfied with the progress they made in Geneva, went into France, and after working for a while with Toutin came to See also: England with letters of introduction to Turquet de Mayern, physician to See also: Charles I., who presented them to the
See also: king, for whom they made a St
See also: George for the badge of the See also: order and carried out many commissions for portraits; amongst others preparing two large ones representing See also: Rachel de See also: Ruvigny, countess of Southampton, now at See also: Chatsworth, and Mary See also: Villiers, duchess of See also: Richmond and Lennox, dated 1643, at one See also: time in the possession of the See also: Crown and now in the Pierpont See also: Morgan collection
.
On the execution of the king, Petitot See also: left England for See also: Paris with the royal See also: household, Bordier remaining in England and carrying out certain important commissions for See also: Cromwell and the parliament
.
On reaching Paris, Petitot entered into partnership with a goldsmith, Jacques Bordier, a See also: cousin of Pierre, and it seems probable from See also: recent research in contemporary documents that the enamel portraits attributed to Petitot were really the See also: work of the two partners collaborating, the actual See also: drawing being the work of Petitot, while for the enamel See also: process Bordier was mainly responsible
.
The two painters were given apartments in the Louvre, received numerous commissions from See also: Louis XIV., and painted portraits of almost every
See also: person of importance in his brilliant See also: court
.
The friendship between the two lasted for See also: thirty-five years, and was only put an end to by Bordier's See also: death
.
The enamellers rendered See also: special See also: political services in France for the republic of Geneva, and were practically regarded as the official representatives of the republic, receiving warm thanks from the Syndics for their See also: diplomatic work
.
On the revocation of the Edict of See also: Nantes, 1685, pressure was brought to bear upon Petitot that he should change his See also: religion
.
The king protected him as long as possible, and when he was arrested, with his niece, See also: Anne Bordier, sent See also: Bossuet, See also: bishop of See also: Meaux, to convince the old See also: man of the error of his ways
.
Eventually, in poor See also: health and See also: great despair, Petitot placed his signature to an See also: act of abjuration, and Louis XIV., unwilling to acknowledge the true reason for the imprisonment of Petitot and for his liberation, informed one of his sons, who came to thank him for the See also: pardon given to his father, that he was willing to fall in for once with " the whim of an old man who desired to be buried with his ancestors." In 1687 therefore Petitot left Paris to return to Geneva, and, after a long and tedious inquiry, was absolved by the consistory of the See also: church of Geneva from the
See also: crime of which they considered he had been guilty, and received back to the Huguenot communion in the church of St See also: Gervais
.
In Geneva he received a very important commission fromSee also: John Sobieski, king of Poland, who required portraits of himself and his
See also: queen
.
This was followed by number-less other commissions which the painter carried out
.
He died of paralysis on the 3rd of See also: April 1691, while in the very act of See also: painting on the enamel a portrait of his faithful wife
.
Petitot married in 1651 See also: Marguerite Cuper, and Jacques Bordier married in the same See also: year her younger See also: sister Anne Madeleine
.
He had seventeen See also: children, and for their benefit wrote out a little See also: octavo See also: volume containing some genealogical information, two delightful portraits, one of himself and one of his wife, and many pages occupied with prayers, meditations and religious advice
.
He also prepared a second See also: manuscript volume of prayers and meditations for the use of his family, and from these two books and the records of the Huguenot See also: societies of France and England information has been obtained respecting the painter and his family
.
Of the See also: works of Petitot the most important collection is in the See also: Jones Bequest at the
See also: Victoria and See also: Albert Museum
.
There are many in the Louvre, sixteen at See also: Chantilly, seventeen at Windsor, and others in the collections of See also: Earl See also: Beauchamp, the duke of Rut-See also: land, the duke of Richmond, the earl of Dartrey, Mr See also: Alfred de See also: Rothschild and the See also: late Baroness See also: Burdett-See also: Coutts
.
Amongst See also: Lord Dartrey's examples are portraits of Petitot and of his son, and two of the wife of Jean Petitot the younger
.
A second portrait of the artist belongs to the queen of See also: Holland, and another is in the collection of the late Mr Stroehlin of Geneva
.
In Mr Pierpont Morgan's collection there are many exceedingly
See also: fine examples, but especially three drawings on paper, the only three which appear to have survived, and the large signed See also: miniature of the duchess of Richmond already mentioned, the largest work Petitot ever executed save the one at Chatsworth
.
See Petitot et Bordier, by Ernest Stroehlin (Geneva, 1905) ; " Some New Information respecting Jean Petitot," by G
.
C . See also: Williamson, Nineteenth Century and After (See also: January 1908), pp
.
98–110; the privately printed See also: Catalogue of the Collection of Mr J
.
Pierpont Morgan, vol. iii.; The See also: History of Portrait Miniatures, by G
.
C
.
Williamson, vol. ii
.
(See also: London, 1904)
.
(G
.
C
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