(b Paris, 19 Nov. 1616; d Paris, 30 Apr. 1655). French painter. He was a pupil of Vouet, whose influence is strong on his early works (Presentation of the Virgin, c.1640, Hermitage, St Petersburg). In the 1640s he was profoundly affected by the paintings of Poussin (who visited Paris 1640–2) and his work became more classical. He lacked Poussin's heroic grandeur, but he added a tenderness of his own to the master's manner, as in his most important works, a series of paintings (begun 1645) illustrating the life of St Bruno, done for the Charterhouse of Paris and now in the Louvre. In the last years of his life his chief model became Raphael, especially through engravings of his tapestry designs. Le Sueur was a founder member of the French Académie Royale (see academy) in 1648.
Text source: The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists (Oxford University Press)