Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Omer Talon was the attorney general to the Parisian Parliament at the beginning of the Fronde, a period of civil war in France, known for opposing a major tax proposed by Louis XIV’s mother, Anne of Austria. With his singular style of engraving, Claude Mellan employed parallel lines, rather than cross-hatching, to create shading. This technique is visible on Talon’s cap, where Mellan thickened and darkened portions of the lines around its center to suggest a dark fabric lit from above. Since this style leaves more of the paper untouched by ink, Mellan’s engravings are often lighter than works by his contemporaries.
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Claude Mellan|Omer Talon — Omer Talon
Cornelis Visscher — Robert Junius
Robert Nanteuil|Philippe de Champaigne — Victor Bouthillier
Robert Nanteuil — Michael Le Masle
Antoine Masson — François Rouxel de Medavy, Archbishop of Ro
Robert Nanteuil — Michel Le Masle
Claude Mellan|Victor le Bouthillier — Victor le Bouthillier
Robert Nanteuil — Denis de La Barde
François Chereau, the elder — Portrait of Cardinal Fleury
Robert Nanteuil — Charles-Maurice Le Tellier
Robert Nanteuil — Jean de Maupeou
Robert Nanteuil — Claude Thévenin