Moillon specialized in still-life painting, commonly using oil paint on canvas or wood panel. She also made works primarily containing fruits that were usually arranged on tables. Her work is characterized by stillness and acute detail, such as the texture of exotic fruit glowingly displayed against a dark background. She used
Trompe l’oeil elements to give viewers an illusion and make her paintings realistic. Louise Moillon used ''
Trompe l'oeil'' to give her still-lifes a lot of texture which further contribute to the realistic aspects and make her paintings relatable to pictures. Moillon additionally created ledges in her pieces that spread to the end of the picture frame to enhance the illusion. Although Moillon painted still-lifes, human figures sometimes appeared in the background of her pieces. Moillon was one of the first French still-life artists to combine figures and still-life before 1650 along with another painter named
Jacques Linard. Moillon's style used elements from Flemish painting through use of ''
trompe l'oeil'' elements and the contrast of cool and warm toned colors along with aspects of French genre painting as shown through the compositional style of her paintings. Some of Louise Moillon's painting compositions have been described to have a primitive quality due to the way she arranges the fruit. The notion that Louise Moillon was highly regarded by her contemporaries is demonstrated by the writing of
Georges de Scudéry (1646) who placed her name alongside the still-life painters
Jacques Linard and
Peter van Boucle (Pieter van Boeckel), comparing all three to Michelangelo, Raphael, and Titian. She had many notable patrons including Louis XIII's minister of finance. In 1641, she collaborated with Boucle and Linard on a large composition of fruit and flowers. The majority of Moillon's paintings were executed in the 1630s, before her marriage in 1640 to Etienne Girardot de Chancourt. Her last dated work is from 1674. == Gallery of works ==