Jean Ranc. Jean Ranc was a French painter, mainly active in portraiture.
He trained under his father Antoine Ranc and his father's former student Hyacinthe Rigaud and served in the courts of both Louis XV of France and Philip V of Spain. Ranc the younger was born in Montpellier, the son of the provincial portraitist Antoine Ranc the elder.
Antoine had a personal collection of paintings by the European masters, and received many young artists into his studio, including Hyacinthe Rigaud from 1671. Jean Ranc moved to Paris in 1696, and became the student of Rigaud, working in his studio.
Ranc registered with the Académie on 30 December 1700, being received into it on 28 July 1703 as a portraitist for his portraits of Nicolas Van Plattenberg, known as Platte-Montagne and that of François Verdier. Despite aspirations to become a history painter, he was never received as such by the Académie.
Jean Ranc then became established as a portraitist to the Parisian bourgeoisie and produced a large number of paintings in the styles of Rigaud and Nattier; Ranc was cheaper than Rigaud. On 13 June 1715 he married his god-daughter and the niece of his teacher, Marguerite Elisabeth Rigaud, daughter of the painter Gaspard. On the Bourbons' arrival in Spain with the coronation of Philip V, grandson of Louis XIV of France, none of the French painters sent to Spain seemed to be making any impact. Repeated excus