Anne Baptiste Nivelon – Wikipedia

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Anne Baptiste Nivelon, née Féret (c.1711–1786) was a French painter active in Versailles the mid-18th century, known for her portraits of members of the royal court.

Anne Féret, later known as Anne Baptiste Nivelon, was born circa 1711 to Jean-Baptiste Féret, a landscape and history painter agréé at the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture, and Marie-Anne Thibert.

In January 1741, she married François Nivelon at a ceremony attended by prominent members of the French nobility, including the Comte de Gramont, the Maréchale d’Estrées, the Comtesse de Mailly, and the Comtesse de Vintimille.[1] The couple lived in Versailles on rue de Satory.[2][3]

Around the mid-18th century, Nivelon became active as an artist, with her most notable works dating from 1750 to 1764.[4] She worked largely for members of the court.[5] Nivelon likely adopted the name Baptiste, which does not appear in civil records, in reference to her father, a court painter to the king.[6] Her adoption of two names typically used for men during the Ancien régime later caused confusion about her gender.[7]

Following her husband’s death in 1770, Nivelon appears to have continued her artistic work until her later years.[6] She died on 16 February 1786, at the age of approximately 74, and was buried the following day.[8]


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