Louis Peter Boitard

French engraver and designer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroFrench engraver and designer
PlacesFrance
isEngraver Designer
Work fieldArts Creativity
Gender
Male
The details

Biography

Louis Peter Boitard (fl. 1750) was a French engraver and designer, who worked in London.

Life

He was born in France, and was a pupil of Raymond Lafage. His father François Boitard brought him to England. The date of his death is unknown, being stated by some authorities as 1758, by others as after 1760.

Works

He made engravings after Canaletto, Christophe Huet, Giovanni Paolo Pannini, and others. One of his best-known plates represents the Rotunda at Ranelagh Gardens, after Pannini. In 1747 he supplied forty-one large plates for Joseph Spence's Polymetis. He engraved the illustrations to John Gilbert Cooper's Life of Socrates (1749), Robert Paltock's The Life and Adventures of Peter Wilkins, a Cornish Man (1750), and Richard Owen Cambridge's Scribleriad (1751).

The Sailor's Return, 1744.

He executed many vignettes, designs, and portraits, among those one of Elizabeth Canning; and he is said to have been a humorist and a member of the Artists' Club.

Family

His wife was English; and he had a son of the same name and profession.

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