Charles Dauphin
Charles Claude Dauphin or Dofin, called in Italian Delfino, was a French painter of historical subjects and portraits. He was born in the duchy of Lorraine and lived most of his adult life in the Savoyard state.
Biography
Early life and education
He was born in Nancy, Lorraine, Holy Roman Empire. He learned the rudiments of painting in his hometown, but the wars that ravaged Lorraine from 1635 forced him to seek refuge in Paris. By about 1640, he had joined in Paris the studio of Simon Vouet. There he worked alongside François Tortebat and Michel Dorigny. In June 1647, he married Marie Du Mouchet, by whom he had two daughters. No works from this period have been identified, perhaps confused with the production of other studio members.In Turin
When Vouet died in 1649, his studio dispersed. Dauphin went to Turin about the year 1652, and from 1658 he worked for the Prince of Carignano. From then on, he worked exclusively for the House of Savoy at Turin and in the churches there. He distinguished himself both in portraits of princes, as well as in allegories and mythologies and in altarpieces, combining Flemish schemes and styles with the decorativism adopted by the Carlones and the Recchis.After the death of his wife, Dauphin remarried to Lucrezia Giugali, by whom he had several children. By 1660 he was working for the Savoy Court, working for the Great Room and the Room of the Dignitaries' in the Royal Palace of Turin in 1661. A Crucifix was done for Christine of France in 1662 and at about the same time, the artist took part in a series of equestrian portraits with the characters in pairs, for the Palace of Venaria, giving them the three most sustained examples in which the Van Dyck stamp, generic, is overpowered by the show of worldly French style, In the meanwhile in 1664 three paintings for San Francesco da Paola followed, somewhat unequal in their pictorial presentation. In the same period Dauphin participated with Jan Miel in the illustration of Emanuele Tesauro's sumptuous work, Del Regno d'Italia sotto i barbari.
Maturity
In 1664, Miel, his main competitor, died, leaving Dauphin unchallenged at the forefront of Turin's art scene from that moment until his death. Among the works of this period the frescoes on the ceilings of the Grooms' Room and the Pages' Room in the Royal Palace of Turin stand out. Other ceilings of the Royal Palace have been destroved. The ceiling at the Palace of the City is intact with the canvas of the Miracle of The Host, of 1663, in particularly brilliant colours.Dauphin's fame spread as far as Lyon and even to Paris. In 1670 he was requested to do five paintings for an alcove of the Duke's lover, Madamigella de Marolles; in this room one of the Recchis also collaborated in the decoration. Worthy of mention also is the large canvas of St. Paul begging which has a distinctive « romanisant » Academism with a feeling of Jansenist puritanism.
Dauphin died in Turin in 1677, apparently without having accumulated great wealth, as his widow continued to receive subsidies from the Prince of Carignano in the following years.