
Jean Moyreau was a French engraver and print publisher.
Jean Moyreau was born in Orléans, in the parish of Saint-Paul, on January 16, 1690.
He moved to Paris, where he became a pupil of Bon Boullogne, then a member of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture on December 29, 1736. He exhibited at the Salon between 1737 and 1761.
He mainly engraved the works of Antoine Watteau (1735) and Philips Wouwermans, both as part of the translation of the Recueil Crozat and that of Jean de Jullienne. He was one of the engravers employed on the Recueil d'estampes d'après les plus beaux tableaux et d'après les plus beaux desseins qui sont en France (François Basan, 1763).
Around 1739, he was said to be a royal engraver with his workshop in Paris on Rue Galande, then around 1750, on Rue du Petit-Pont S. Séverin at the image of Notre Dame.
He died in Paris on October 26, 1762.