He left Lyon for Paris at the age of twenty and found employment in the large atelier of Charles Le Brun, the equivalent of an academy. He made his reputation with his portraits in pastels, to which he gave a sparkle and immediacy previously unreached in that medium.
He was received in the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture in 1701, under the designation peintre en pastel. His morceaux de reception, pastel portraits of the sculptor François Girardon and the architect Robert de Cotte, are in the Louvre Museum. He was appointed counsellor to the Academy and provided with lodging under royal auspices at the Gobelins Manufactory.
From Paris he visited Brussels.[2] Vivien was taken up by the francophile Elector of Cologne and worked in Munich as first painter to the Elector's brother, Maximilian Emmanuel, Elector of Bavaria.[3] At the time of his death in Bonn, he was engaged on a vast canvas combining portraits of the whole family of the Elector, in oils.[4]
Selected illustrations of Vivien's portraits
Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria
Joseph Ferdinand of Bavaria
Robert de Cotte, 1701
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joseph Vivien.
Grove Dictionary of Art. Grove. 1996. p.659.
Matthew Pilkington and Johann Heinrich Füssli, A Dictionary of Painters
H. Borsch-Supan, "Joseph Vivien als Hofmaler der Wittelsbacher", Münchner Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst14 (1963).
Benezit Dictionary of Artists. Paris: Éditions Gründ. 2006. p.411.
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