Aglaé Cadet

Born in Paris, Cadet was the daughter of lawyer Jean-Pierre Joly, and was supposedly a distant relation of the marquis de Marigny; her family claimed a portion of his estate at one time.

Their daughter Marie-Aglaé, later married to printseller Julien-François Fatou, became a miniaturist like her mother.

A second daughter, Rosalie-Louise, having divorced her first husband, became the wife of the marquis de Montalembert,[1] while a third, Henriette-Thérèse, married Jean-Baptiste Weyler,[2] who is believed to have been her mother's instructor.

Cadet, named a peintre de la reine in 1787, was best known for her work in miniature and enamel, though a single pastel, similar in composition to those produced by Weyler, is known.

At the Paris Salon of 1791 she showed a portrait of Jacques Necker; she is also known to have produced an enamel of Maurice de Saxe, after a work by Jean-Étienne Liotard, in 1789.

Aglaé Cadet, Portrait of Michel Victor Frédéric Moisson de Vaux, captain of Régiment des Dragons de la Reine , 1784