Dictionary of Renaissance art

LE NAIN BROTHERS

(Antoine, 1588-1648;Louis, c. 1593-1648;Mathieu, c. 1607-1677)
The Le Nain brothers were painters from Laon, where their father Isaac owned property. Scholarship on these individuals is complicated by the fact that they often collaborated on commissions, which has made it difficult to identify the contributions of each. Also, they signed their works only by surname and only their paintings from the 1640s are firmly dated. In the late 1620s, the Le Nain were in Paris where Mathieu is documented in 1633 as the city's official painter. There, the Le Nain were among the artists who established theFrench Academyin 1648.Antoine and Louis died in that year, two days from each other. In 1652, Mathieu was named painter to the king and, in 1662, he was granted the title of Cavalier of the Order of St. Michael, a title he lost for his inability to prove his birth into nobility.
In spite of the problems of attribution posed by the Le Nain's collaboration, there are three main styles that emerge in the body of works they left. One is a group of small pictures on copper rendered with strong colors that portrays bourgeois individuals in their homes. These are normally given to Antoine, as in the case of theMusical Gatheringof 1648 (Paris, Louvre). To Louis are attributed the peasant scenes with subdued colors that relate to the work of the Bamboccianti, a group of Dutch painters led by Pieter van Laer, called Bamboccio, who were active in Italy and specialized ingenrescenes. Louis would have become acquainted with the Bamboccianti during his stay inRomein 1626-1630, or in Paris in 1626 when Laer visited briefly. Of the works given to Louis, the best-known is thePeasant Family in an Interior(1645-1648; Paris, Louvre), a scene that depicts the working class in all its dignity. The final group of paintings, of military officers, is usually ascribed to Mathieu as he was a lieutenant in the Parisian militia. One such work isLa Tabagieof 1643 in the Louvre. Barring the difficulties in Le Nain scholarship, the brothers stand out in the history of French art for having popularized genre in the region and for providing a refreshing contrast to theclassicistrenderings of their French contemporaries.