Isabelle Pinson
Isabelle Pinson, commonly known as Madame Pinson, was a French genre and portrait painter. She is best recognized for her artwork titled "The Fly Catcher", which was prominently exhibited at the Snite Museum of Art in 2019.
Biography
Birth and background
Isabelle was born on 26 June 1769 in Paris, France and was baptized at the Church of Saint-Sulpice. She was named in honor of her godmother and her mother's employer, Isabelle de Jaucourt. Before her birth, her parents, Fabien Proteau and his wife, Marie Bourdereau, married in 1768.Marie was a native of Brinon-sur-Beuvron. Eleven years prior to her birth, in 1758, Marie, along with her six siblings, were taken in by Isabelle de Jaucourt to live in her private mansion on Rue de la Chaise, where she took the role of chambermaid.
Fabien was a Burgundian from Genlis, Côte-d'Or; he served as a valet to the Viscount of Jaucourt until his passing on 17 April 1771.
Education
After the death of her father, Isabelle was taken under the care of her godmother. Having shown an aptitude for drawing at an early age, she received lessons from renowned painters Jean-Baptiste Regnault, François-André Vincent, and Adélaïde Labille-Guiard. It's possible Isabelle met Jean-Antoine Houdon from her early childhood with the Jaucourt family.Marriage
On 19 July 1792, Isabelle discreetly married in a property he had purchased from Louis Philippe II, Duke of Orléans in the Clichy-en-Launois. She was 23 and he was 32 years her senior.Career
As a painter, Isabelle significantly distinguished herself as a portraitist. In particular, she produced portraits of medical personalities. She participated in the Salon for the first time in 1796, presenting three portraits. At the Salon of 1801, Isabelle exhibited a painting of Jacques-René Tenon.Furthermore, a work by Isabelle Pinson is part of the collections of the Palace of Versailles. It depicts man of letters, Pierre-Noël Famin. It was offered at the museum in 1839 by Pierre-Jules Jollivet, a grandson of one of the sisters of Famin.