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#Françoise-Marie de Bourbon
didoofcarthage · 1 year
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Françoise-Marie, Duchesse d'Orléans, as Amphitrite by Rosalba Carriera, after an allegorical painting at Versailles by a follower of Pierre Mignard
Italian, first half of the 18th century
watercolor on ivory
Royal Collection Trust
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roehenstart · 2 years
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Françoise-Marie de Bourbon, legitimated, known as Mlle de Blois in wedding dress. Daughter of Louis XIV and Mme de Montespan, she married Philippe d'Orléans, duc de Chartres and died in 1749.
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taylor swift lyrics x colors x textiles in art – blue
Tim McGraw – Taylor Swift // Portrait of Marie-Joseph Peyre – Marie-Suzanne Giroust 💙 Tim McGraw – Taylor Swift // Lady in the Boudoir – Gustav Holweg-Glantschnigg 💙 A Place in This World – Taylor Swift // Portrait of Prince William Henry, Duke of Gloucester – Jean-Étienne Liotard 💙 Dear John – Speak Now // Young Woman in a Blue Dress – Jacopo Negretti 💙 State of Grace – Red // Portrait of Mrs. Matthew Tilghman and her Daughter – John Hesselius 💙 Red – Red // An Unknown Man – Joseph Highmore 💙 All Too Well – Red // Portrait of a Man with a Quilted Sleeve – Titian 💙 Everything Has Changed – Red // Portrait of the Marquis de Saint-Paul – Jean-Baptiste Greuze 💙 Starlight – Red // Mrs. Richard Brown – John Hesselius 💙 Run – Red // Judith with the Head of Holofernes – Felice Ficherelli 💙 This Love – 1989 // Fair Rosamund – John William Waterhouse 💙 Delicate – Reputation // Miss Elizabeth Ingram – Joshua Reynolds 💙 Gorgeous – Reputation // Marguerite Hessein, Lady of Rambouillet de la Sablière – workshop of Henri and Charles Beaubrun 💙 Dancing with Our Hands Tied – Reputation // George Albert, Prince of East Frisia – Johann Conrad Eichler
Cruel Summer – Lover // Peter August Friedrich von Koskull – Michael Ludwig Claus 💙 Lover – Lover // Lady Oxenden – Joseph Wright of Derby 💙 Miss Americana & the Heartbreak Prince – Lover // Portrait of Ivan Ivanovich Betskoi – Alexander Roslin 💙 Paper Rings – Lover // Young Woman in a Blue Dress – Jacopo Negretti 💙 London Boy – Lover // Queen Henrietta Maria with Sir Jeffrey Hudson – Anthony van Dyck 💙 Afterglow – Lover // Portrait of Prince Dmitry Mikhailovich Golitsyn – Fyodor Rokotov 💙 Christmas Tree Farm – Christmas Tree Farm // Portrait of Mary Ruthven, Lady van Dyck – Anthony van Dyck 💙 invisible string – folklore // Two Altar Wings with the Visitation of Mary – unknown artist 💙 invisible string – folklore // Portrait of Madame de Pompadour – François Boucher 💙 peace – folklore // Fair Rosamund – John William Waterhouse 💙 hoax – folklore // Portrait of Charles le Normant du Coudray – Jean-Baptiste Perronneau 💙 coney island – evermore // Portrait of the Marquis de Saint-Paul – Jean-Baptiste Greuze 💙 Carolina – Carolina // Mrs. Daniel Sargent – John Singleton Copley 💙 Bejeweled – Midnights // Elsa Elisabeth Brahe – David Klöcker Ehrenstrahl 💙 The Great War – Midnights // Portrait of Françoise Marie de Bourbon – attributed to François de Troy 💙 Hits Different – Midnights // Mrs. Benjamin Pickman – John Singleton Copley
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kaitropoli · 8 months
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"Louise-Marie de Bourbon, dite Mademoiselle de Tours; La fillette aux bulles de savon"
By Pierre Mignard
Oil Painting, 1681.
Château de Versailles.
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PORTRAIT SUBJECT
La fillette aux bulles de savon, or the commonly found English title, Girl Blowing Soap Bubbles, is a portrait of innocence during the Franco-Dutch War.
The child shown is Louise-Marie de Bourbon, the daughter of the Sun King, Louis XIV, and his Maîtresse-en-titre, Françoise-Athénaïs de Rochechouart (Madame de Montespan). I'm sorry, I don't know why they popped off with the names like that when they're planning to reuse Marie and Louis fifty times over ptdr. Louise-Marie, affectionately known as Toutou, was an illegitimate birth (1674), later legitimized by her father when she was around two years old. She held the title of Mademoiselle de Tours from then until her untimely death in 1681.
According to sources, Mignard's painting of the six-year-old girl was finished posthumously. But, her innocence is held delicately, frozen in time on canvas.
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THEMES OF CHILDHOOD INNOCENCE (TL;DR: YAPANESE)
Mignard's choice to paint Louise-Marie as an actual child was uncommon for the time (even centuries later, believe it or not; maybe not so good examples, but for argument-sake: Louis XV by Hyacinthe Rigaud, Mariana Victoria of Spain by Nicolas de Largillierre, Phillip II, Duke of Orléans, Reagent of France by Largillierre, and Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans, "Mademoiselle de Chartres" by Largillierre -- apologies for throwing you strays, man, I'm trying to finish writing this and your children portraits were on the same website next to each other x), as young royalty are painted either as babies (unbreeched/baptize gown) or as tiny adults (fixed in uncomfortable poses and wearing clothes a monarch would), no in between. Here, Louise-Marie is playing with bubbles, her dog jumping towards it, and she looks carefree, still with chubby cheeks of rose. It doesn't help much that children were seen as heirs to the family fortune, especially during a time when parents had multiple kids due to illness (premature death) and bringing in income (need I explain more... *cough cough* coal mines... a bit anachronistic, sorry breaker boys, some other time we'll discuss y'all).
A painting such as this one, showing a realistic human experience from a royal status and that of a child BEING a child, innocence still intact, is quite important, even in today's form. We take childhood for granted, and kids are forced to grow up despite having more rights now than before. It can be a portrait to remind us that innocence is vital (a lack of childhood is detrimental as the experience is needed in order to mature mentally and emotionally when entering the teen and adult stages of life), but also that we as humans weren't so different from back then (sure, you can claim we bathe more than they do despite your husband still not washing his ass, but my heavens, did the thought 'wait, they had bubbles back then' ever occur to you?).
Genuinely, I was going to pull a La Muse Verte (the post where I briefly explained the history of absinthe) and go into the history of bubbles... because you gotta admit, that'd be fun for the both of us. However, delving into the background and theme of this painting became more heartbreaking for me. The bubble idea isn't gone, but it'll be postponed as a full history lesson post (and, yes, Mignard's painting of the immortalized Toutou will be recycled).
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FURTHER READING (EXTRA SYMBOLISTIC DETAIL)
Plenty more symbolism is present, but I highly recommend you all check out L'Art en Tête's in-depth article on Mignard's beautiful portrait. I did regurgitate some of the author's points in this because I thought they were brilliant, and you can tell they have an art-history degree, so I'm begging you to go over there for more detail if interested!
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comtessezouboff · 1 year
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Max Emmanuel II's Gallery of Beauties
A retexture by La Comtesse Zouboff — Original Mesh by @thejim07
Elector Max Emanuel’s Great Gallery of Beauties shows five portraits of ladies at the court of Louis XIV, painted by Pierre Gobert around 1715, brought from the Palace of Versailles, these paintings displayed ladies and princesses of the french court at the dawn of Louis XIV's life.
This set contains 5 portraits, with the original frame swatches, fully recolourable. The portraits are of:
Marie-Anne de Clermont, Duchess of Joyeuse with a dog.
Marie Anne de Bourbon-Conti, Princess of Conti as Venus with Cupid
Marie Louise Élisabeth d'Orléans, Duchess of Berry
Louise Françoise de Crussol d'Úzès, Marquise of Gondrin as venus with cupid
Marie-Anne de Bourbon, Princess of Conti as Pomona, with Vertumnus at her side (replacing the portrait of Madame de Charolois, as no decent pictures of the portrait exists)
Found under decor > paintings for 2.090§
Retextured from the "Portrait of the Duchess of Angoulême" found here
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CC shown here:
Wall paneling and floor by @thejim07
Loveseat, armchairs and chairs by @aroundthesims
Doors by @joojconverts
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docholligay · 1 year
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I want to publicly thank @keyofjetwolf for creating an environment for Mademoiselle Geneviève Marie-Françoise de Bourbon-Penthièvre to thrive, as I may get the chance to use her next year if I get brave for Ren faire.
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venicepearl · 2 years
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Marie Anne de Bourbon (16 October 1697 – 11 August 1741) was Surintendante de la Maison de la Reine to the French queen Marie Leszczyńska. She was the daughter of Louis III, Prince of Condé. Her father was the grandson of le Grand Condé and her mother, Louise Françoise de Bourbon, Mademoiselle de Nantes, was the eldest surviving daughter of Louis XIV of France and his maîtresse-en-titre, Madame de Montespan. She was known as Mademoiselle de Clermont.
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sporadiceagleheart · 3 months
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Louis XIV, Vienna H. Dill, Louis XVII, Lois Janes, Sharon Lee Gallegos, Princess Sophie Hélène Béatrice of France, Louis Joseph, Dauphin of France, Louis XIII, Anne of Austria, Maria Theresa of Spain, Françoise d'Aubigné, Philippe I Duke of Orléans, Louis “Le Grand Dauphin” de France, Marie Anne de Bourbon, Marie Thérèse de France, Louis de Bourbon, Comte de Vermandois, Louise de La Vallière, Philippe Charles de France, Louis Auguste de Bourbon, Louis Cesar De Bourbon, Louise Françoise de Bourbon, Louise-Marie Anne “Tou Tou” de Bourbon, Françoise Marie de Bourbon, Louis Alexandre de Bourbon, Madame de Montespan, Philippe d'Orléans II, Alice Elizabeth Doherty, Infant Male Lent, Julia Pastrana, Josephine Myrtle Corbin, Ella 'the Camel Girl' Harper, Fanny Mills, Josephine Clofullia, Annie Kerr Aiken, Gracie Perry Watson, Inez Clarke Briggs, Annie Oakley, Zip the Pinhead, Mary Ann Bevan Nurse, Stephan Bibrowski, Guy Pierre de Fontgalland, Myra Maybelle Shirley Reed Starr, Sitting Bull Leader, Gail Davis, Clara Barton American nurse, Frank E. Butler, Wilma Jones Rat, Pal, Laika, Jimmy the Crow, Pocahontas, Powhatan, John Noyce Milner, John Rolfe, Elizabeth Rolfe Milner, Cleopatra Powhatan, Chief Opechancanough Mangopeesomon “Eagle Plume” Powhatan, Chief Weroance Nectowance Powhatan, Zeus, Olivia Twenty Dahl, Roald Dahl, Sofie Magdalene Dahl, Mary Magdalene, Mona Lisa, Jesus, Mary and Joseph, Harald Dahl, Francis II Of France, Henri III of France, Terry, Matachanna Shawano “Cleopatra” Powhatan Cornstalk, Mary Elizabeth Hughes Davis, Annie Jones Elliot, Jenny Lind, Mercy Lavinia Warren Stratton, Minnie Warren, no matter what you look like or how you feel Jesus will help you Jesus will make a way for you like God Jesus healed those even animals now they are in heaven with Wings and Halo they are called Angels right now and I made this tribute edit about what Jesus and his family can do they can make children that passed away from cancer covid flu Beating torture murder shooting Stabbing Wounds and pain they healed it all they healed those children they made them in heaven Angels in heaven they can rest easy they can do the things they couldn't do down here on earth
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christophe76460 · 2 years
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BIOGRAPHIE DE PIERRE DU MOULIN
Pierre Du Moulin, né le 16 octobre 1568 à Buhy et mort le 10 mars 1658 à Sedan, est un pasteur et théologien protestant français réputé pour son orthodoxie. Il est connu comme premier pasteur du temple de Charenton et tenant de l'Académie de Sedan l'espace d'une trentaine d'années (1621-1658).
Pierre est le fils de de Joachim Du Moulin, pasteur protestant, et le petit-fils de Charles Dumoulin, juriste de renom. Le 24 avril 1564, Joachim épousa en l'église d'Orléans, demoiselle Françoise Gabet, fille d'Innocent Gabet, juge pour le Roi, à Vienne en Dauphiné (qui sera tué par les catholiques peu après le massacre de la Saint-Barthélemy). De ce mariage sont issus quatre enfants : Esther, Joachim, Pierre et Éléazar.
Joachim du Moulin, avec ses deux enfants, Esther et Joachim, âgés de trois ans et de un an, et sa femme enceinte de Pierre, fuyait la persécution ; il avait été chassé de son église de Mouy. Après avoir erré de retraite en retraite, la famille arrive au château de Buhy, en Vexin. Monsieur de Buhi, protestant, frère de Philippe Duplessis-Mornay, lui offrit un asile. C'est dans ces circonstances que naquit Pierre du Moulin, le 16 octobre 1568.
En 1570, l'édit de Pacification permit à Joachim de réunir toute sa famille à Cœuvres, où était réfugiée l'église protestante de Soissons, chez Jean Ier d'Estrées ; église dont il était le pasteur. Après le massacre de la Saint-Barthélémy, Antoine d'Estrées, qui succédait à son père, change de religion et chasse ses anciens protégés.
Ils trouvèrent la protection du duc de Bouillon, alors Henri-Robert de La Marck, et arrivèrent à Sedan le 3 janvier 1573. La mère, Françoise, mourut peu après leur arrivée, le 13 février 1573. L'année suivante, Joachim du Moulin se remaria, avec Guillemette d'Avrigny « de la maison d'Anserville». De ce second mariage naquirent trois enfants : Marie, Jean et Daniel.
Quelque temps après il alla de nouveau servir l'église réformée de Soissons, installée alors Saint-Pierre-Aigle, laissant ses enfants à Sedan.
En 1584 Joachim du Moulin revint à Sedan pour s'y fixer. Pierre suivait les cours du collège, nouvellement fondé.
En 1588, fuyant les guerres de la Ligue, il s'échappa en Angleterre. Il y devint le précepteur du fils de la comtesse de Rutland, lequel étudiait à Cambridge. C'est ainsi qu'il suivit les cours du docteur Wittaker. Durant les vacances, il allait à Londres au contact de l'église réformée wallonne.
Il était installé depuis quatre ans en Angleterre lorsqu'il se résolut à rejoindre Leyde où son ami François du Jon professait la théologie. Il accepta un poste de conrecteur, sorte de maître-adjoint, au collège de Leyde. Peu après, il fut admis, sur concours, à l'âge de vingt-quatre ans, professeur à l'Académie de Leyde. Il resta dans cette charge cinq ans et trois mois.
En 1595, il publia sa première œuvre, qui eut de nombreuses rééditions : La Logique françoise.
À Leyde, il prend pension chez Joseph Juste Scaliger, où il rencontre des personnages distingués et de grand mérite et s'y fait de puissants amis. Durant son séjour à Leyde, il fréquente, Paul Trude Choart, duc de Buzenval, alors ambassadeur de France à La Haye.
En 1599, il revient à Paris, où on lui confie le soin d'accompagner, avec la fonction de chapelain, la princesse Catherine de Bourbon en Lorraine. Chaque année d'abord, puis, à partir de 1603, tous les deux ans, il faisait le même voyage, qui durait trois mois. C'est au cours de ce voyage, en 1599, qu'il rencontra à Vitry-le-François, Marie Colignon, « demoiselle de la Religion » ; il l'épouse à son retour en France.
Il s'installe ainsi, en 1599, à Grigny, comme pasteur, puis se déplace, vers 1603, dans la paroisse d'Ablon. Pierre Du Moulin fut le premier pasteur du temple de Charenton.
En août 1605, il est député à l'assemblée politique générale de l’Église réformée qui se tient à Châtellerault.
Il passe ainsi une quinzaine d'années de controverses, contre les catholiques, mais aussi contre certains réformés. Il est appelé en 1615 en Angleterre pour y travailler à une réunion des églises protestantes, et préside le synode d'Alès en 1620.
Dans cette année 1620, la situation politique se gâte pour les réformés. Pierre Du Moulin quitte alors la France pour Sedan où il arrive le 16 janvier 1621, pour quelque temps pensait-il ; il y resta 37 ans, jusqu'à sa mort.
Il sera l'une des personnalités les plus puissantes et les plus influentes de l'Académie de Sedan et le précepteur de Frédéric-Maurice de La Tour d'Auvergne.
Vers 1638, il écrit Esclaircissement des controverses salmuriennes qui circulera neuf ans à l'état de manuscrit avant d'être imprimé ; il en permit la publication en 1647.
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lemaldusiecle · 2 years
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Portrait de Françoise-Marie de Bourbon, atelier de Pierre Gobert, fin du XVIIe siècle.
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winterhalters · 4 years
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The seats left empty by the lack of functioning and legitimate female members of the royal family was for Louis XIV an opportunity to fill the void with more effective partners, created and chosen by and for himself. While his nieces were sent off to foreign Courts, his legitimised daughters were married to male members of the extended royal family. Mistresses and favorites of the King did not only serve as romantic or sexual companions; the importance of their position at Court translated by their inclusion to the royal family through the production and/or the appropriation of a much-needed offspring.
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widvile-blog · 7 years
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Françoise Marie de Bourbon, Duchess of Orléans (4 May 1677 - 1 February 1749)
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rosalba-carriera · 3 years
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Portrait of Françoise Marie de Bourbon, Duchess of Orléans and wife of the Regent of France, as Amphitrite, Rosalba Carriera
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comtessezouboff · 1 year
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Louis XIV's Gallery of Beauties
A retexture by La Comtesse Zouboff — Original Mesh by @thejim07
This set of 20 portraits was comissioned by the king himself in the 1650s to Charles and Henri Beaubrun (except for a portrait of Henrietta Anna of England, Comissioned to Nicolas Mignard) The portraits comprises the queen, royal princesses and ladies of the court. They hanged at the king's appartments at Versailles. In the 1670s the paintings were progressively relegated to the king's minor residences, but in 1837, Louis-Philippe, King of the French turned Versailles into a museum and rejoined the paintings, in the Louis XIV Rooms, where they remain.
The set includes 20 portraits, with the original frame swatches, fully recolorable. The portraits are of:
Anne Genèvieve de Bourbon, Duchess d'Estouteville and Longueville
Françoise-Athénaïs de Rochechouart (later, Marquise de Montespan)
Anna Martonozzi, Princess of Conti
Anne Louise Boyer, Duchess of Noailles
Anne Marie Gonzaga, Countess Palatine
Anne de Rohan-Chabot, Princess de Soubise
Catherine Henriette d'Harcourt, Duchess d'Arpajon
Catherine de Neuville, Countess d'Armagnac
Charlotte Catherine de Gramont, Proncess of Monaco
Charlotte Isabelle Angélique de Montmorency-Bouteville, Duchess of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
Elizabeth of Orléans, Duchess of Guise and Joÿeuse
Françoise Madeleine d'Orléans (née de Valois) Duchess of Savoy
Françoise Mignot, Mareschalle of l'Hospital
Françoise de Neufville, Duchess of Chaulnes
Gabrielle-Louise de Saint-Simon, Duchess of Brissac
Henrietta Anna of England, Duchess of Orléans
Madeleine-Charlotte d'Albert-d'Ailly, Duchess of Foix
Marguerite Louise d'Orléans, Grand Duchess of Tuscany
Marguerite-Louise-Suzanne de Béthune-Sully, Countess of Gyche
Marie Thérèse of Austria, Queen Consort of France and Navarre
Found under Decor > Paintings for 940 §
Retextured from the "portrait of Anne Marie Louise d'Orléans", found here
Table, torcheres and floor by @thejim07
Rest of the decor by @joojconverts
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boredmariedelline · 3 years
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VADD Paintings Aesthetic #6
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Derrick Eckhart
Portrait of Margaret, Lady Oxenden by Thomas Hudson, 1755-56 | Portrait of Maria Christina of the Two Sicilies, Queen of Spain by Vicente López y Portaña, 1830 | A self-portrait of Marie-Gabrielle Capet, 1783 | Portrait of Françoise-Marie de Bourbon-France by François de Troy, 1692 | Portrait of Elizabeth Howard by George Knapton, 18th century | Portrait of Lady Mary Herbert, Viscountess Montagu by François de Troy, 1688 | La Bella by Titian, 1536
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venicepearl · 6 years
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Françoise Marie de Bourbon
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