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Sebastien Slodtz

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Sebastien Slodtz

Sebastien Slodtz

Sebastien Slodtz (1655–1726) was a French sculptor, the father of a trio of brothers who helped shape official French sculpture between the Baroque and the Rococo. He was born at Antwerp and joined the Paris workshop of Francois Girardon, under whose direction he worked for the sculptural decor of Versailles and its gardens and for the Tuileries. Sebastien Slodtz was the outstanding sculptor to come out of Girardon's atelier (Souchal 1968). He held the post of Dessinateur de la Chambre et du Cabinet de Sa Majeste, a post that two of his sons filled after him.

Sebastien Slodtz is best known for his Aristaeus fettering Proteus, begun in 1688, installed in 1714 in the Bassin d'Apollon on the grand terrace at Versailles, where it remains. His other chief works were the Hannibal Barca counting the rings of the Roman knights killed at the Battle of Cannae (illustration) for the Allee du Roi, which was designed as a pendant for Nicolas Coustou's Julius Caesar and for which Girardon provided a terracotta maquette a statue of St Ambrose in the Dome des Invalides, and a bas-relief Saint Louis sending missionaries to India. Other works were provided for the Chateau de Marly, such as the marble Vertumnus for the Cascade and sculptures for the Val-de-Grace.

His sons, notably Rene-Michel Slodtz (1705–64) called Michelange, the only great sculptor among the Slodtz, according to Francois Souchal, but also his two brothers, who worked in partnership largely for the ephemeral royal and princely occasions overseen by the department of the Menus Plaisirs: the designer-decorator Sebastien-Antoine (1695–1754) and the sculptor Paul-Ambroise (1702–58), who was the only one of the three to be accepted in the Academie royale de peinture et de sculpture. Their lively, dashing drawings cannot be told apart, even by specialists.

Among the pupils of Sebastien Slodtz was Pierre de L’Estache.

References

Sebastien Slodtz Wikipedia