Career
Joseph Werner the Younger became an artist of international repute. He continued his studies in Frankfurt, went to Rome to paint and travelled to France where, at the court of Louis XIV he painted portraits of both the monarch himself and of various notables in his entourage. He also worked on the decorations of the Palace of Versailles.
In 1667, he left France but continued to move in exalted circles.
In Augsburg he worked for the Bavarian Elector in Vienna, painting a portrait of Leopold I, and was then invited to Berlin by the Prussian King Frederik. He earned a reputation as a miniatures painter at the court of the Saxon King in Dresden.
In Berlin, he was appointed Director of the newly established Prussian Academy of Fine Art
In 1764, Joseph Christopher Werner made sketches of the royal insignia during the coronation of the last Polish king, Stanislaw August Poniatowski. Werner’s drawings are in the Royal Castle and Cabinet of Engravings at the University Library of Warsaw.