Abstract

The aim of this article is to present the circumstances of Noël Coypel’s appointment as rector of the French Academy in Rome and to trace the route of his didactic journey from Paris to Rome with the Prix de Rome scholars entrusted to him. The paper is an attempt to answer the following questions: why a more difficult route through the Alps was chosen (and not, for example, a river and sea route), in what way was the journey educational, and what role did the documents given to Coypel play in securing the expedition.
 The article is based on an analysis of administrative records during the reign of Louis XIV, lists of superintendents and directors of the French Academy in Rome, accounts of royal buildings, and minutes of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture in Paris. The paper uses the analytical method, the comparative method, the synthetic method, source criticism, argumentum ex silentio inference, and the geographical method when discussing the itinerary.
 Although the trip was purposeful and related to Coypel’s new position, he designed it in such a way as to not so much get to the destination quickly, but to show his students as much as possible. Coypel introduced the royal scholars to masterpieces of painting and sculpture at centers along a route through Dijon, Lyon, Chambéry, the Mont Cenis Pass, Turin, Milan, Bologna and Florence. The crossing of the Alps, though dangerous, was most often chosen because of the artistic reputation of the cities there. The trip was educational at the expense of comfort or safety. Coypel, as a guide and teacher (paidagōgós – παιδαγωγός) led his charges by overseeing their learning during and through the journey. Wandering to the Eternal City was part of a painter’s education (paideía – παιδεία) in the seventeenth century and was part of Coypel’s didactic work allowing young people to be inspired by direct exposure to masterpieces. The journey had an eminently didactic and artistic character, but also an initiatory one, as it gradually initiated and prepared the students for the experience of Rome, the center of artistic life at that time.

Highlights

  • The aim of this article is to present the circumstances of Noël Coypel’s appointment as rector of the French Academy in Rome and to trace the route of his didactic journey from Paris to Rome with the Prix de Rome scholars entrusted to him

  • The article is based on an analysis of administrative records during the reign of Louis XIV, lists of superintendents and directors of the French Academy in Rome, accounts of royal buildings, and minutes of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture in Paris

  • All roads followed by the 17th-century artists, especially those connected with academic art, led to Rome

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Summary

On the certificates confirming being awarded the Royal prize

École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Ms 480, L’Etablissement de l’Académie royale de Peinture et de Sculpture [Du 29 iour d’Octobre 1672, unnumbered pages]. 11 “Envoyant à Rome le Sieur Coypel, l’un de nos Peintres ordinaires, avec les nommés Antoine Coypel, son fils, Charles Hérault, Louis-Henri Hérault, Simon Chupini, Farjat, Charles Poerson, Alexandre, Tortebat, Pierre Monnier, Voulan et Jouvenet”: Paris, Archives Nationale de France, Archives de la Marine, Dépêches concernant le commerce, 1672, fol. Cf.: Correspondance des directeurs de l’Académie de France à Rome, vol 1, 40; Correspondance administrative sous le règne de Louis XIV entre le cabinet du roi, les secrétaires d’Etat, le chancelier de France et les intendants et gouverneurs des provinces, les présidents, procureurs et avocats généraux des parlements et autres Cours de Justice, par Georges Bernard Depping, vol 4 (Paris: Imprimerie Nationale, 1855), 592; Lettres, instructions et mémoires de Colbert, 341; Lapauze, Histoire de l’Académie de France, 37. 15 Comptes des Bâtiments du Roi sous le règne de Louis XIV, publiées par Jules Guiffrey, vol 1, Colbert. 1664–1680 (Paris: Imprimerie Nationale, 1881), 648; Correspondance des directeurs de l’Académie de France à Rome, vol 1, 40; Correspondance des directeurs de l’Académie de France à Rome avec les surintendants des bâtiments, publiée par Anatole de Montaiglon et Jules Guiffrey, vol 6, 1721–1724 (Paris: Charavay Frères, 1896), 432; Lecoy de La Marche, L’Académie de France à Rome, 17; Lapauze, Histoire de l’Académie de France, 37

16 More on travelling
18 More on the issue in
22 Ennemond Servien’s letter to Colbert of 15 December 1672
24 He is also mentioned in
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