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Demolition of L'Église des Saints Innocents, Paris

1787 · Private collection

interior

L'Église des Saints Innocents (Church of the Holy Innocents) was located in the cemetery of the same name on the rue Saint-Denis in Paris In 1786, a Parliamentary public health order decreed that the cemetery and church be destroyed to make way for a marketplace. De Machy painted numerous paintings and drawings of the church both before and during its destruction, the present painting is probably one of the three which were exhibited in the Salon of 1787.

Demolition of L'Église des Saints Innocents, Paris

About the Artist

Pierre-Antoine de Machy

17231807

French painter and engraver. He was the son of a cabinetmaker and served his apprenticeship with Giovanni Niccolò Servandoni. He was approved (agréé) by the Académie Royale de Peinture, Paris, in 1755 and was received (reçu) three years later as a painter of architecture. He exhibited regularly at the Salon from 1757 to 1802. His views of the interiors of the Paris churches of Ste Geneviève and the Madeleine were painted from architectural plans and exhibited at the Salons of 1761 and 1763 respectively, earning Diderot's praise. At the Salon of 1763 de Machy also demonstrated his talent for painting contemporary events with a pair of pictures of the Foire Saint-Germain after the fire of 1762 (both Paris, Carnavalet) and a scene of the Installation of Bouchardon's Statue of Louis XV (untraced), with the statue being placed on its pedestal in the Place Louis XV (now the Place de la Concorde). Later, however, de Machy suffered increasingly from comparison with other painters, especially those who, unlike himself, had studied in Italy. At the Salon of 1765 his Inauguration of Ste Geneviève and the Building of the Halle au Blé (both Paris, Carnavalet) were overshadowed by Servandoni's works, and in 1767 his pictures were totally eclipsed by the works of Hubert Robert, who had recently returned from Italy. At this exhibition Diderot found de Machy's pictures lacking in the quality of handling and Italian light effects that characterized Robert's painting.

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