Jacques Stella (1596, Lyon - 29 April 1657, Paris) was a French painter.
His father was François Stella, a painter and merchant of Flemish origin, but he died too soon to train Jacques in painting. Jacques's siblings included François (another painter), Françoise (a pastel artist) and Madeleine (a sculptor and the mother of artists). Jacques Stella trained in Lyon before spending the period from 1616 to 1621 in the court of Cosimo II de Medici in...
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Jacques Stella (1596, Lyon - 29 April 1657, Paris) was a French painter.
His father was François Stella, a painter and merchant of Flemish origin, but he died too soon to train Jacques in painting. Jacques's siblings included François (another painter), Françoise (a pastel artist) and Madeleine (a sculptor and the mother of artists). Jacques Stella trained in Lyon before spending the period from 1616 to 1621 in the court of Cosimo II de Medici in Florence, working alongside Jacques Callot - Florentine art is a strong influence on all Stella's work. On Cosimo's death in 1621 Stella moved to Rome, where he spent the next 10 years and won a reputation thanks to his paintings, small engravings and painted work on stones (onyx, lapis-lazuli or simply slate). Particularly working for pope Urban VIII, Stella was influenced in Rome by classicism and more specifically by the art of Nicolas Poussin, with whom he became an intimate friend.
Returning to Lyon in 1634 before moving to Paris a year...
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