HOME
What's New Subscribe to our Electronic Newsletters Calendar of Events Recent Acquisitions Videos and Podcasts About the Gallery The Darker Side of Light: Arts of Privacy, 1850–1900 The Robert and Jane Meyerhoff Collection: Selected Works
Global Navigation Collection Exhibitions Planning a Visit Programs Online Tours Education Resources Gallery Shop Support the Gallery NGA Kids
National Gallery of Art - THE COLLECTION

Tour: Marble Sculpture from France

Overview | Start Tour

image of Monumental Urn image of Neapolitan Fisherboy (PĂȘcheur napolitain Ă  la coquille)
7 8
«previous
« back to European sculpture of the 14th-19th centuries

Overview

The works in the East Sculpture Hall span some 250 years of French history, from before the birth of Louis XIV to the Second Empire. During those years, both artistic styles and the sources of patronage changed dramatically. Voltaire maintained that "sculpture reached perfection under Louis XIV." At Versailles alone, more than 36,000 laborers and 6,000 horses worked for almost fifteen years to transform the king's small hunting chateau into Europe's most magnificent and influential palace. Their efforts were unified by the artistic supervision of Charles Le Brun, whose grandiose classicism stamped the entire output of French art in the late 1600s. (continue)


Captions

1.
1Barthélemy Prieur, Justice, 1610
2Benoßt Massou, Anselme Flamen, and Nicolas Rebillé, A Garden Allegory: The Dew and Zephyr Cultivating Flowers, 1683/1732
3Jean-Louis Lemoyne, A Companion of Diana, 1724
4Augustin Pajou, Calliope, c. 1763
5Jean-Pierre-Antoine Tassaert, Painting and Sculpture, 1774/1778
6Clodion, Poetry and Music, c. 1774/1778
2.
7Clodion, Monumental Urn, 1782
8Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux, Neapolitan Fisherboy (PĂȘcheur napolitain Ă  la coquille), 1857-after 1861