In 1755 he traveled to
Paris, where he became a student of
Chardin. He later became a student of
Alexander Roslin, a professor at
Bayreuth and court painter to
Stanisław August Poniatowski of Poland. Krafft painted in Paris included Count Nils Nilsson Bonde and some
genre portraits, for example a
Young Girl who Plays Lira (1758). In such images, he followed
Jean-Baptiste Greuze's style, which was in vogue at the time. In 1762 Krafft was appointed as professor at the Margrave of Bayreuth's Academy of Art. Here he performed a brilliant portrait of the Duchess of Württemberg
Margravine Elisabeth Fredericka Sophie of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, and a portrait of the Margravine's friend, the ambassador, Count Fr. Ellrodt. Margrave Frederick's death dissolved the academy and the artists dispersed. Krafft then went to Italy, where he visited
Bologna and
Florence. After a new subsistence in
Bayreuth, where Krafft again portrayed the Duchess of Wurttemberg, he went to
Dresden, where he portrayed the minister, Baron von Fritsch. For the Polish king,
Stanisław August Poniatowski, Krafft was called to
Warsaw, where he painted in 1767–68 a
pictor regius with a variety of portraits for the Polish court. ==Return to Sweden==