It seems that Philip V had obtained satisfaction through the intercession of
Madame de Maintenon, who in a letter to the
Duke of Noailles, dated March 11, 1701 wrote: The day before, the
Marquis de Dangeau left in his journal testimony corroborating the statements of Mme de Maintenon, describing the beginning of the Louis XIV painting, painted in privacy and designed to be embedded later into the final composition: On September 3, 1703, in a touching letter he wrote to the Marquise, Philip V in turn confessed: The size and complexity of the composition justified the expectations of the sponsors and the time spent by the artist to complete his work. All the evidence is that Rigaud painted from life while completing the portrait, which never did get sent to Spain. Thursday, January 19, 1702, Rigaud is seeking a new session, wrote the Marquis de Dangeau: of Hyacinthe Rigaud from which he made
Portrait of Louis XIV (1701)
Musée Condé (
Château de Chantilly) The director of the King's Buildings ordered from the painter's studio a number of copies (in various forms for European courts or provincial royal dispensaries, such as that commissioned by François Stiémart, for example) or engravings, proved by a payment order dated September 16, 1702: "To Sieur Rigaud, ordinary painter of the King, for two large portraits of the King in full, with the sketch in small of the said portraits, as also of the full-length portrait of the King of Spain he made during the current year, 10,000 livres".
Pierre Drevet was appointed to carry out the engravings and receives "perfect payment of five thousand livres for the engraving [
sic ] he made of the portrait at the foot of the King Louis XIV, according to M. Rigaud, during 1714–1715." To do this, Drevet been assisted by a drawing executed by the young
Jean-Marc Nattier and to who the director of buildings records payment, on August 20, 1713: Drevet owes a great deal to Nattier's work, which has recreated Rigaud's painting to its smallest details, to the projected dimensions of an etching. However, it extended the marble gallery in the background slightly, a variation followed by the engraver. There is no doubt that Rigaud himself supervised Nattier's work, since the drawing was intended for his friend Prevet, and Marc's father, Natier Mariette considers the work of Drevet as "what [the artist] has made more considerable" and that she " engraved by order of his very Christian Majesty and Estre put in his Cabinet." In 1733, he noted the rarity in a letter to
Gabburri: "For my part I can encourage you to acquire a portrait of the reigning king and the queen, but the one engraved by Drevet is very difficult to have, and I have it Seen for sale at more than eight livres. I can have it for a discreet price but I have to give me time." ==Description==