Pierre-Simon-Benjamin Duvivier (3 November 1730 – 10 July 1819) was a French engraver of coins and medals.
Early years
Pierre-Simon-Benjamin Duvivier was born in Paris on 3 November 1730. He was son of the well-known medallist Jean Duvivier and of his wife, Louise Vignon. His family originated from Liège.[1]
His brother was Thomas-Germain-Joseph Duvivier, also a painter and engraver.[2]
His sister Jeanne-Louise-Françoise married the engraver Jacques-Nicolas Tardieu and is on record as having made several engravings herself.[3]
Benjamin Duvivier was placed in the Collège Mazarin to study humanities and philosophy, where he met and befriended Abraham Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron and Nicolas Louis de Lacaille, the future astronomer.
He planned to undertake a voyage of exploration with Anquetil-Duperron, but was forced to cancel it for reasons of health.
When his father violently objected to his decision to follow a career in art, he left home and moved in with his sister and brother-in-law, the Academician Tardieu.[4]
His mother died in 1752.
On 25 September 1756 he won a medal from the Academy for a nature scene.[5]
Career
Benjamin Duvivier's father died on 30 April 1761. Benjamin applied to the king to retain the position that his father had occupied in the Louvre Galleries, and on 7 June 1762 this was granted to him, and he thus assumed his father's job as medallist to the King.[5]
Benjamin Duvivier probably had more talent than his father.[6]
On 24 November 1764 he was accepted as a Member of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture.
On 13 February 1765 he obtained a brevet royal that authorized him to spend a year in Italy.[7]
On 21 August 1774 he obtained the position of general engraver of coins, replacing Joseph-Charles Roëttiers.[8]
Duvivier taught his brother-in-law Pierre-Joseph Tiolier (1763-1819), who was appointed General Engraver of the mint in 1803.[11]
During the French Revolution, on 11 July 1791 Duvivier's title and position were abolished and he was replaced by his former assistant Augustin Dupré.[9]
In 1806 Duvivier was appointed to the engraving section of the Beaux-Arts school at the Institut de France.[12]
He died in Paris on 10 July 1819.
His son may have been the painter Français Duvivier, who opened an academy of drawing and painting in Philadelphia in 1796.[13]
Barre, Albert (1867). Graveurs généraux et particuliers des Monnaies de France, contrôleurs généraux des effigies, noms de quelques graveurs en médailles de la Renaissance française. Paris.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)