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A History of Art for Beginners and Students - Painting, Sculpture, Architecture
by Clara Erskine Clement
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In his professional life he was just and generous to others, and though he would have no pupils, he would leave everything to advise an artist or visit his works. He was also a patron of art, and had executed, at his own expense, the numerous busts of distinguished persons in the Capitoline Museum.



There is a story of a romance in his life. It is said that when he first arrived in Venice he fell in love with a beautiful girl who was older than himself, who went to draw in the Farsetti Gallery. Day by day he watched her until she came no more; at length her attendant returned, and Canova inquired for her mistress; she burst into tears and answered, "La Signora Julia is dead." He asked no more, and never knew who Julia was or any circumstances of her history; but all his life he treasured her image, and when he endeavored to unite the purity of an angel with the earthly beauty of a woman, the remembrance of Julia was always in his mind.

Canova was one of the few artists who received their full merit of praise and the benefits of their labors while alive. Without doubt he was a great sculptor, and coming as he did, at a time when art was at its worst, he seemed all the more remarkable to the men around him. But the verdict of to-day would not exalt him as highly as did his friends and patrons. His statues lack the repose which makes the grandest feature of the best sculpture; his female figures have a sentimental sort of air that is not all we could wish, and does not elevate them above what we may call pleasing art. His male figures are better, more natural and simple, though some of his subjects bordered on the coarse and brutal, as in the two fencers, Kreugas and Damoxenes, or Hercules and Lichas. But in his religious subjects he is much finer, and in some of his monuments he shows dignity and earnestness, while his composition is in the true artistic spirit. Taken on the whole, he was a wonderful artist and a man of whom his century might well be proud.

Other sculptors of this period and of different nations studied at Rome, and devoted themselves to the antique with enthusiasm. One of these was ANTOINE DENIS CHAUDET (1763-1810), who was born at Paris. His talent was so early developed that he was admitted to the Royal Academy when fourteen years old, and when twenty-one he gained the first prize, and with the royal pension went to Rome, where he remained five years. He soon took good rank among artists of that time, for he was a designer and painter as well as sculptor. He adhered strictly to the antique style, and attained much purity, though he was always cold in treatment. He was made a Professor of Sculpture in the French Academy, and made valuable contributions to the "Dictionary of Fine Arts."

Chaudet's principal works in sculpture were the silver statue of Peace in the Tuileries; a statue of Cincinnatus in the Senate Chamber; a statue of OEdipus; a bas-relief of Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture, in the Musee Napoleon, and many busts and smaller works.

He also designed numerous medals and some of the illustrations for a fine edition of Racine, and painted a picture of AEneas and Anchises in the Burning of Troy.

JOHANN HEINRICH DANNECKER (1758-1841) was born at Stuttgart. By a statue of Milo he gained the prize of the academy founded by Duke Charles Eugene, and with the royal pension he went first to Paris and then to Rome, where he studied seven years. He then returned to Wuertemberg, and was made Director of the Royal Academy, with a salary of fifteen thousand francs a year. During fifteen years Dannecker maintained a high rank in his art, but his health became so feeble that he was forced to see others excel him. One of his works has a wide reputation, and is known to many people the world over, through the generosity of Herr Bethmann of Frankfort, who admits visitors to his gallery, and from the models and pictures which have been made from it; it is the Ariadne on a Panther (Fig. 117).

Dannecker had a delicate feeling for nature; his figures were light and graceful, and his heads were noble in expression. He labored eight years upon a figure of Christ, which belongs to the Emperor of Russia; in Stuttgart a nymph pouring water on Neckar Street and two nymphs on a reservoir in the palace garden show his fine taste in architectural sculpture. Among his other works are a statue of Alexander, a monument to Count Zeppelin, a Cupid, and a Maiden lamenting a Dead Bird. Some of his works are among the very best productions of modern sculpture; his portraits are noble and true to nature; the works named here are by no means all that he did, and we should add that his efforts in religious subjects exhibit a pure sense of the beautiful, and a true conception of Christian ideas.



We come now, for the first time, to a great English sculptor. JOHN FLAXMAN (1755-1826) was born in York, but while he was still an infant his father removed to London, where he kept a plaster-cast shop. The boy began to draw and even to model very early; when but five years old he kept some soft wax, with which he could take an impression from any seal or ring or coin which pleased him. He was very delicate in health, and was once thought to be dead, and was prepared for burial, when animation returned; his parents tried to gratify all his wishes, and while a child he modelled a great number of figures in wax, clay, and plaster.

By the time he was ten years old he was much stronger, and was able to use the activity which corresponded to his enthusiastic feeling and imagination. About this time he read "Don Quixote," and was so moved by the adventures of that hero that he went out early one morning armed with a toy sword and bent upon protecting some forlorn damsel; he went to Hyde Park and wandered about all day, not finding any one who was in need of his services. At night he returned home, very hungry and weary, to find his family in great alarm over his unusual absence.

He now spent all his time in drawing and modelling, and never had more than two lessons from a master; at eleven years of age he began to gain various prizes, and at fourteen was admitted to study at the Royal Academy, and gained the silver medal there that same year. About this time he made some friends who aided him to study the classics and to learn more of history, all of which was of great use to him in his art. He was also fortunate in having the friendship of Mr. Wedgwood, for whom he made many models. He also painted a few pictures in oil.

Among his earliest sculptures were a group of Venus and Cupid and a monument to Mrs. Morley, who, with her baby, died at sea. Flaxman represented the mother and child rising from the sea and being received by descending angels.

In 1782 Flaxman married Miss Ann Denman, whose intelligence and love of art were of great assistance to her husband. In 1787 he went to Rome, where he remained seven years. During this time he made a group for Lord Bristol, representing the Fury of Athamas, from the Metamorphoses of Ovid; this work cost him much labor, for which he received but small pay; it was carried to Ireland and then to Ickworth House, in Suffolk, where but few people see it. In Rome Flaxman also made a group of Cephalus and Aurora for Mr. Thomas Hope, and the designs from Homer, AEschylus, and Dante, which have such a world-wide fame.

In 1794 he returned to England, where he was constantly employed on important works until his death. We cannot give a list of his numerous works. Many of his monuments are seen in the churches of England. In Glasgow are his statues of Mr. Pitt and Sir John Moore, in bronze; in Edinburgh is that of Robert Burns. Flaxman executed much sculpture for the East Indies, one of these works being unfinished when he died. Some critics consider his Archangel Michael and Satan his best work; it was made for the Earl of Egremont, who had his life-size Apollo also.

In 1797 Flaxman was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy, in 1800 an Academician, and in 1810, when a Professor of Sculpture was added to the other professors of the Academy, he was appointed to the office. His lectures have been published. The friezes on the Covent Garden Theatre were all designed by Flaxman, and he executed the figure of Comedy himself. His last work was making designs for the exterior decoration of Buckingham Palace, which would have been entirely under his direction and partly executed by him if he had lived.

His wife died in 1820, and her loss was a grief from which he could not recover; she had been a great advantage to him, and he had depended much upon her sympathy and counsel. Flaxman was a singularly pure man, and so attractive in manner that he was the friend of old and young alike.

Sir Richard Westmacott succeeded Flaxman as Professor at the Royal Academy; he said: "But the greatest of modern sculptors was our illustrious countryman, John Flaxman, who not only had all the fine feeling of the ancient Greeks (which Canova in a degree possessed), but united to it a readiness of invention and a simplicity of design truly astonishing. Though Canova was his superior in the manual part, high finishing, yet in the higher qualities, poetical feeling and invention, Flaxman was as superior to Canova as was Shakespeare to the dramatists of his day."

But the perfection of the results of the study of Canova and others who endeavored to raise sculpture to its ancient glory was seen in the Dane, BERTEL THORWALDSEN (1770-1844), who was born in Copenhagen. The descent of this artist has been traced to memorable sources in two quite distinct ways. Those who claim that the Norsemen discovered America relate that during their stay upon this coast a child was born, from whom Thorwaldsen's descent can be distinctly followed. The learned genealogists of Iceland say that his ancestors were descended from Harald Hildetand, King of Denmark, who, in the eighth century, was obliged to flee, first to Norway and then to Iceland, and that one of his descendants, Oluf Paa, in the twelfth century, was a famous wood-carver. But this much is certain: in the fourteenth century there lived in Southern Iceland a wealthy man, whose family and descendants were much honored. One of these, Thorvald Gottskalken, a pastor, had two sons and but a small fortune; so he sent his sons to Copenhagen, where one became a jeweller and died young; the other, who was a wood-carver, was the father of the artist, whose mother was Karen Groeulund, the daughter of a Jutland peasant.

The father was employed in a shipyard, and carved only the rude ornaments of vessels and boats; but these served to lead the mind of the little Bertel to the art he later followed. His father could not have dreamed of such a future as came to his son, but he was wise enough to know that the boy might do more and better than he had done, and he sent him, when eleven years old, to the free school of the Royal Academy to study drawing; and very soon the works of the father showed the gain which the son had made, for his designs were those now used by the old wood-carver.

Bertel was also sent to study his books at the school of Charlottenburg, and here he was so far from clever that he was put in the lowest class. When Bertel gained his first prize at the academy the chaplain of the school at Charlottenburg asked him if the boy who had taken the prize was his brother. He looked up with surprise, and blushing, said, "It is myself, Herr Chaplain." The priest was astounded at this, and said, "Herr Thorwaldsen, please to pass up to the first class."

The boy was amazed at these honors, and from this day retained the title of "Herr," which gave him much distinction. When, after many years, the sculptor had been loaded with honors, and stood on the heights of fame, he was accustomed to say that no glory had ever been so sweet to him as that first rapture which came from the words of the Chaplain Hoeyer when he was seventeen years old and a poor school-boy.

The effect of this first prize seemed to be to rouse his ambition, and he worked with the greatest diligence and earnestness. Two years later he made a bas-relief of Love in Repose, which took the large silver medal. His father now thought him prepared to enter on the life of a ship's carver, and Bertel made no objection to doing so; but the painter Abildgaard, who had been his teacher in the academy, had grown very fond of him, and saw how much talent he had, and could not think of his being but a common tradesman without deep regret. He went, therefore, to the old carver, and after some difficulty obtained his consent that his son should spend half his time in study at the academy, and the other half in the earning of his daily bread at his father's side.

In 1790, when twenty years old, Thorwaldsen made a medallion of the Princess of Denmark, which was so good a likeness that a number of copies was sold. A year later he gained the small gold medal of the academy by a bas-relief of the Expulsion of Heliodorus from the Temple. The Minister of State now became interested in the young artist, and measures were taken to aid him to go on with his studies. His patrons desired him to study the subjects of the antique sculptures, and he chose that of Priam begging the Body of Hector from Achilles. Later in life he repeated this subject, and it is interesting to notice the strength and grandeur of the second when compared with the weakness of the first. And yet it was from the latter that predictions were made of Thorwaldsen's future greatness. In 1793 he gained the prize which entitled him to travel and study three years at the expense of the academy. The work he presented was a bas-relief of Saint Peter healing the Paralytic. In these works this sculptor already showed two qualities which remained the same through his life; in his subjects from antiquity he showed a Greek spirit, which has led some writers to speak of him as a "posthumous Greek," or a true Greek artist born after other Greek artists had died; on the other hand, when he treated religious subjects his spirit was like that of the best masters of the Renaissance, and these works remind us of Raphael. All this excellence came entirely from his artistic nature, for outside of that he was ignorant; he knew nothing of history or literature, and was never a man of culture as long as he lived. Outside of the work connected with his profession Thorwaldsen was indolent, and only acquired knowledge of other matters through observation or from the conversation of others.

Although he gained the prize which allowed him to travel in 1793, he did not leave Copenhagen until May, 1796. In the mean time he had done what he could to earn something: he had made designs for book-publishers, given lessons in drawing and modelling, and made some bust and medallion portraits, reliefs, and so on. The vessel in which the young sculptor sailed for Naples was called the Thetis, and the captain engaged to watch over him; the voyage was long, and all on board became fond of Thorwaldsen, though the captain wrote, "He is an honest boy, but a lazy rascal." This opinion is very amusing when we know what an enormous amount of labor he performed. At Naples he remained for some time, and saw and admired all its works of art. He did not reach Rome until about nine months after leaving Copenhagen, but from that time his whole thought and life were changed. He was accustomed to say, "I was born on the 8th of March, 1797; before then I did not exist."

While in Naples Thorwaldsen had been ill, and suffered from a malarial affection, which compelled him to be idle much of the time. But he was always studying the antique statues, and made many copies. Some of the first original works which he attempted were failures, when, at last, he modelled a colossal statue of Jason, which was well received by those who saw it, and made him somewhat famous in Rome (Fig. 118). Canova praised it, and other critics did the same; but Thorwaldsen had no money; the academy had supported him six years; what could he do? Quite discouraged, he was engaged in his preparations for leaving Rome, when Mr. Thomas Hope, the English banker, gave him an order for the Jason in marble. In an hour his life was changed. He was living in Rome not as a student on charity, but as an artist gaining his living. We are forced to add that Mr. Hope did not receive this statue until 1828, and Thorwaldsen has been much blamed for his apparent ingratitude; but we cannot here give all the details of the unfortunate affair.

Thorwaldsen had a true and faithful friend in Rome, the archaeologist Zoega; at his house the young Dane had met a beautiful Italian girl, Anna Maria Magnani, whom he loved devotedly. She was too ambitious to marry a poor sculptor, so she married a rich M. d'Uhden; but she persuaded Thorwaldsen to sign an agreement by which he bound himself to take care of her if she should not agree with her husband and should leave him; this was just what happened in 1803, and the sculptor received her into his house, where she remained sixteen years, when she disappears from his life. He provided an honorable marriage for their daughter.



In 1803 Thorwaldsen also made the acquaintance of the Baron von Schubart, the Danish Minister, who presented the sculptor to Baron von Humboldt; and through the friendship of these two men, and the persons to whom they presented him, Thorwaldsen received many orders. In 1804 his fame had become so well established that he received orders from all countries, and from this time, during the rest of his life, he was never able to do all that was required of him. He was much courted in society, where he was praised for his art and beloved for his agreeable and pleasing manner. In this same year he was made a Professor of the Royal Academy of Florence; and though the Academy of Copenhagen expected his return, they would not recall him from the scene of his triumphs, and sent him a gift of four hundred crowns. A few months later he was made a member of the Academy of Bologna and of that of his native city, in which last he was also appointed a Professor.

Many circumstances conspired to increase his popularity and to excite the popular interest in him, when, in 1805, he produced the bas-relief of the Abduction of Briseis, which still remains one of his most celebrated works. His Jason had put him on a level with Canova, who was then at the height of his fame; now the Briseis was said by many to excel the same type of works by Canova, and there is no question that in bas-relief the Dane was the better sculptor of the two. This relief and his group of Cupid and Psyche, which was completed in 1805, mark the era at which Thorwaldsen reached his full perfection as a sculptor. In this same year he modelled his first statue of Venus; it was less than life-size; and though two copies of it were finished in marble, he was not pleased with it, and destroyed the model: later he made the same statue in full size.

In 1806 he received his first commission for religious subjects, which consisted of two baptismal fonts for a church in the island of Fionia. But he was devoted to mythological subjects, and preferred them before all others, and in this same year modelled a Hebe while engaged upon the fonts. His industry was great, but he found time to receive many visitors at his studio, and went frequently into society. At the house of Baron von Humboldt, then Prussian Ambassador at Rome, Thorwaldsen was always welcome and happy; here he met all persons of note who lived in or who visited Rome.

It was at this period that the young Prince Louis of Bavaria entered into a correspondence with Thorwaldsen, which ended only with the sculptor's life. Louis was collecting objects for his Glyptothek at Munich, and he frequently consulted Thorwaldsen in these matters; his advice was of value, and he more than once saved Louis from imposition by dealers. Louis gave the sculptor the order for the fine Adonis, now in the Glyptothek; it was modelled in 1808, but was not completed until 1832; this splendid work was executed entirely by Thorwaldsen's own hands. In 1808 he also received the order for four bas-reliefs to be used in the restoration of the Palace of Christiansborg, which had been injured by fire. This was the year, too, when he was made an honorary member of the Academy of St. Luke.

The year 1809 brought deep sorrows to Thorwaldsen in the death of his two friends, Stanley and Zoega. He interested himself in the settlement of the affairs of the latter, and had much trouble and anxiety; but he managed to accomplish the modelling of six bas-reliefs in this year, in spite of the disturbed state of Rome on account of the pope's departure, and in spite of the hindrances in his own life.

In 1810 the King of Denmark made Thorwaldsen a Knight of Danebrog, and he was then known in Italy as the Cavaliere Alberto. His work this year was in bas-reliefs, and in 1811 he modelled a colossal statue of Mars, the bust of Mademoiselle Ida Brun, a lovely statue of Psyche, and his own portrait as a colossal Hermes.

The people of Denmark were growing very impatient at the prolonged absence of their artist. He had left home a mere boy, and was now famous over all the world. They wished for his return; a marble quarry had been discovered in Norway, and even Prince Christian Frederick wrote to Thorwaldsen to urge his going home. The sculptor wished to go, and even made some preparations to do so, when he received so important a commission that it was impossible to leave Rome. This new work was a frieze for one of the great halls in the Quirinal Palace. He chose the Entrance of Alexander the Great into Babylon for his subject, and it proved to be one of the most important works of his life. It was completed in June, 1812; and though it had been somewhat criticised as too rough in its finish, when it was elevated to its proper height it was all that had been expected by the artist's friends; later he repeated this frieze for his own countrymen. In Rome he was now frequently called the "Patriarch of Bas-relief." Soon after this he was made a member of the Imperial Academy of Vienna.

In 1813 Thorwaldsen was again a victim of malignant fever, and visited the baths of Lucca, in company with the Baron and Baroness von Schubart, for the benefit of his health. He met many people and received much honor, especially from the Grand Duchess of Tuscany. His health was improved, but his old and tried friend, the Baroness von Schubart, died the winter following; he felt her loss deeply, for she had been his friend and confidante from the time of his arrival in Rome.

He was always busy, and one after another of his almost numberless works was finished. In 1815 he made the Achilles and Priam, a relief which is sometimes called his masterpiece; in the same year he made the famous and familiar medallions of Night and Morning; it is said that he conceived the first while awake in a sleepless, restless condition, and modelled it entirely on the following day; these medallions have been reproduced in all possible forms—in engravings, on cameos, gems, in metals, and a variety of marble, plaster, and porcelain.

About this time Thorwaldsen removed to a spacious studio with gardens, and received pupils, and was overwhelmed with orders, so that he could not yet go to Denmark, in spite of the urgent letters he received. He executed many important original works, and also restored the marbles of AEgina, now at Munich; this was a great task, but his study of the antique had made him better able to do it than was any other modern sculptor.



The exquisite group of Ganymede and the Eagle (Fig. 119) shows the effect of his study of the antique, and the same may be said of his statue of Hope, a small copy of which was afterward placed above the tomb of the Baroness von Humboldt. The Three Graces (Fig. 120) belongs to the year 1817; the Mercury was of about this date, as well as the elegant statue of the Princess Baryatinska, which is his finest portrait statue.

After an absence from Denmark of twenty-three years he left Rome in July, 1819, and turned his face toward home. His model for the famous Lion of Lucerne had already been sent on before him, and the work commenced by one of his pupils, Bienaime. Thorwaldsen first went to Lucerne, where he gave all necessary advice in this work, and then proceeding on his journey reached Copenhagen on the 3d of October. Apartments had been prepared for him in the Academy of Fine Arts, and as soon as it was known that he was there he was the centre of attraction and importance. Crowds went to welcome him to his home. A great reception and a grand banquet were given in his honor, and he was lauded to the skies in speeches, and was made a Counsellor of State, in order that he might sit at table with the royal family and not violate the court etiquette.



All this must have gratified the artist, who had earned such proud honors by the force of his genius; but it interests us much more to know that he received commissions for some very important works, among which those of the Church of Our Lady are very interesting. The orders for all the work which he did here were not given at once, but in the end it became a splendid monument to this sculptor, and embraces almost all his religious works of any importance. There are the figures of Christ and the Twelve Apostles; the Angel of Baptism, which is an exquisite font; the Preaching of St. John the Baptist, which is a group in terra-cotta on the pediment of the church; a bas-relief in marble of the Institution of the Lord's Supper; another in plaster of Christ's Entry into Jerusalem; one of Christ Bearing the Cross; one of the Baptism of Christ; another of the Guardian Angel, and one of Christian Charity.

He did not remain very long in Denmark, but went to Warsaw, where he had been summoned to arrange for some important works. He was presented to the Emperor Alexander, who gave him sittings for a portrait bust; this was so successful that for some years Thorwaldsen employed skilled workmen to constantly repeat it, in order to fill the demand for it which was made upon him. While at Warsaw he received an order for a monument to Copernicus, which was dedicated in 1830; other important commissions were given him, and after visiting Cracow, Troppau, and Vienna, he reached Rome in December, 1820, where he was heartily welcomed by the artists, who gave him a banquet, on which occasion the Prince Royal of Denmark sat next to the sculptor.

Before this a correspondence had established a friendship between Thorwaldsen and Prince Louis of Bavaria; but from the year 1821 intimate personal relations existed between them. He took up work with great energy; he had returned to Rome with so much to do that he required much room, and employed a large company of workmen. In the summer of 1822 he was able to secure a large building which had been used for a stable to the Barberini Palace, and here he was able to set up all his large models.

In 1824 Thorwaldsen was summoned by the Cardinal Consalvi, who gave him the commission for the monument to Pius VII., now in the Clementine Chapel of St. Peter's at Rome; this work was not completed when the cardinal himself died, and his own monument by Thorwaldsen was placed in the Pantheon before that of Pius VII. was put in its place. He also made a cross for the Capuchins for which he would accept no reward, though they were entirely satisfied with it.

In 1825 Thorwaldsen was elected President of the Academy of St. Luke with the advice and consent of Pope Leo XII., who paid him a visit in his studio. Many delays occurred, and the monument to Pius VII. was not erected until 1831.

The works upon which the artist and his assistants were engaged were far too numerous to be mentioned; he was at the very height of fame and popularity, and was forced to refuse some of the commissions sent him. In 1830 he went to Munich to superintend the setting up of his monument to Eugene Beauharnais, the Duke of Leuchtenberg. This gave Louis of Bavaria an opportunity to show his regard for the sculptor, which he did in every possible way. Soon after the monument was unveiled Thorwaldsen received the cross of an officer of the Legion of Honor.

Thorwaldsen's place in Rome was a very important one, not only as an artist, but as a man. He had the respect and esteem of many good men of all nations; he also suffered some things from the envy of those who were jealous of him, as is the case with all successful men; but he was a fearless person, and did not trouble himself on account of these things. The frequent agitations of a political nature, however, did disturb him, and he began to think seriously of returning to Denmark. In 1837, when the cholera broke out in Rome, he determined to leave; his countrymen were delighted, and a government frigate was sent to take him home; he sailed from Leghorn in August, 1838. His arrival was hailed with joy in Denmark, and wherever he went his progress was marked by tokens of the pride which his countrymen felt in him. As soon as it was known in Copenhagen, on September 17th, that the "Rota," which brought the sculptor, was in the harbor, a flag was run up from St. Nicolas Church as a signal for the beginning of the festivities which had been arranged.

Although it rained heavily, boats filled with artists, poets, students, physicians, mechanics, and naval officers went out to meet him; each boat had a flag with an appropriate device, that of the artists having Thorwaldsen's Three Graces, the poets, a Pegasus, and so on. The meeting with his friends on the deck of the ship was a pleasant surprise to the artist, who was hurried ashore amid the firing of salutes and all sorts of joyous demonstrations, a vast number of boats rowing after that in which he was seated. His carriage was drawn by the people from the quay to Charlottenburg, where a vast crowd assembled to get a sight at him. His form was tall and erect, his step firm; his long white hair fell on his shoulders, and his clear eye and benevolent face beamed with intelligence and sympathetic interest in all around him. He was led out on a balcony, where, uncovered, he saluted the people, who greeted him with wild applause. Thorwaldsen smiled and said, "Would not any one think that we were in Rome, and I were the pope about to give the benediction urbi et orbi from the balcony of St. Peter's?"

One ovation after another followed, day by day, and such crowds of visitors went to see him that he was unable to unpack and arrange his possessions which he had brought from Italy, or to work at all, which was worse to him. At last he began to do as he had done in Rome, and to receive his friends with his chisel or modelling-stick in hand. He lived frugally, and continued many of his Roman habits of life; but he was forced to dine out every evening.

He was now sixty-eight years old, but he did a vast amount of work in one way and another, and was so pursued by all sorts of people who wished to engage his attention in a variety of projects, that he seriously considered the question of leaving Copenhagen. He became very fond of certain families where he visited, among which was that of the Baron von Stampe, who, with his wife and children, were soon treated by the sculptor as if they were his own kindred. He went with them to their summer home at Nysoe, and while there the baroness persuaded him to model his own statue. He did this imperfectly, as he had no suitable workshop; and when the baroness saw his difficulty in working in an ordinary room she had a studio built for him in a garden near the castle. She took the time to do this when Thorwaldsen was absent for eight days, and in this short space the whole was completed, so that when he returned it seemed to him like magic. This studio was dedicated in July, 1839.

He then began the proper modelling of his own statue, and was progressing very well when he received a letter from the poet Oehlenschlaeger, who was in great haste to have a portrait bust made of himself. Thorwaldsen felt that he ought not to make his own statue when thus wanted for other work, and he threw down his tools, and would have broken the model. But the baroness succeeded in getting him away, and locked the studio, keeping the key. However, no argument or entreaty would move the sculptor, and she could do nothing with him until she happened to think of crying. When she began to weep and to accuse him of having no affection for her, and reminded him of the proofs of her devotion which she had given him, he was taken in by her mock tears, and exclaimed, "Well, they may think what they like. My statue is not for posterity, but I cannot refuse it to a friend to whom it will give such pleasure." He then resumed his work, and completed his statue in seventeen days. He represented himself standing with one arm resting upon his statue of Hope.

After this summer Thorwaldsen divided his time between Copenhagen and Stampeborg, and worked with the same industry in one place as in the other. The life in the country was a great delight to him; he played games, listened to fairy tales from the poet Andersen, or to music from the young girls of the house, all with equal pleasure; and if he were allowed to have his mornings for work he would spend the rest of the day in the woods or pay visits, and was perfectly happy in this succession of labor and leisure.

Baroness Stampe did not stop at one trick upon the old artist, for she found it more easy to gain a point in this way than by argument. He had promised to execute a statue of Christian IV. for Christian VIII., the reigning king; he put it off until the king was impatient. One day, when he had gone for a walk, the baroness went to the studio and began a sketch in clay as well as she could. When Thorwaldsen returned he asked what she was doing, and she answered, "I am making the statue of the king. Since you will not do it, and I have pledged my word, I must do it myself." The artist laughed, and began to criticise her work; she insisted it was all right, and at last said, "Do it better, then, yourself; you make fun of me; I defy you to find anything to change in my work." Thorwaldsen was thus led on to correct the model, and when once he had begun he finished it.

It would be impossible to give any account here of the numerous incidents in the later years of the life of this sculptor; of the honors he received, of the many works he was consulted about and asked to do, of the visits he paid and received from persons of note; few lives are as full as was his, and the detailed accounts of it are very interesting.

He had always desired to go again to Rome, and in 1841, when the Baron von Stampe decided to go there with his family, Thorwaldsen travelled with them. They went through Germany, and were everywhere received as honorably as if he were a royal person: he was invited to visit royal families; court carriages were at his service; Mendelssohn gave a musical fete for him; in all the great cities he was shown the places and objects worthy of his attention; poets and orators paid him respect, and nothing that could be done to show appreciation of his genius and his works was omitted.

In Rome it was the same; he remained there almost a year, and upon his arrival at Copenhagen, in October, 1842, he experienced the crowning glory of his life. During his absence the Thorwaldsen Museum had been completed, and here, the day after he reached home, he was received. The building was decorated with garlands, and he went over the whole of it; at last he entered the inner court, where he was to be buried; here he stood for some time with bowed head, while all about him kept silence. Can any one fancy the thoughts that must have come to him? Here he must be buried, and yet here would he live in the works of his hand which would surround him and remain to testify to his immortal powers.

He lived three years more, and was always busy. His mind was strong and his conceptions of his subjects had lost nothing, but his ability to execute his works was less; his hand had lost somewhat of its cunning. He went much into society, was fond of the theatre, and under the devoted care of his servant, Wilkens, he enjoyed all that was possible to a man of his age. On the 24th of March 1844, the Baroness von Stampe went to ask him to dine at her house; he said he was not well and would not go out; but as his daughter was to be there and expected him he decided to go. He was modelling a bust of Luther, and threw down before it a handful of clay and stuck a trowel in it; just so, as he left it, this now stands in the museum, preserved under glass, with the print of his hand in the clay.

He was merry at dinner, and in speaking of the museum said he could die now, whenever he chose, since the architect Bindesboell had finished his tomb. After dinner he went to the theatre, and there it was seen that he was really ill; he was taken out with haste and laid upon a sofa, when it was found that he was already dead. The Charlottenburg joined the theatre, and there, in the hall of antique sculpture, he was laid. He was first buried in the Frue Kirke, which he had so splendidly decorated; four years later he was borne to the vault in the centre of the Thorwaldsen Museum, where above him grows the evergreen ivy, a fitting emblem of his unfading fame.

Thiele, in his splendid book called "Thorwaldsen and his Works," gives a list of two hundred and sixty works by this master; and as one journeys from Rome, where are some of his sculptures in St. Peter's and the Quirinal, to Copenhagen, with the Frue Kirke and the Museum, one passes through few cities that are not adorned by his statues and reliefs. Among his most important works are the frieze of Alexander's entrance into Babylon, at the Quirinal; the Lion of Lucerne; the many statues, groups, and bas-reliefs in the Frue Kirke; more than thirty sepulchral and commemorative monuments in various cities and countries; sixteen bas-reliefs which illustrate the story of Cupid and Psyche; twenty bas-reliefs of Genii; twenty-two figures from antique fables, and many portrait busts and statues, and various other subjects.

Thorwaldsen was a very remarkable man. No circumstance of his youth indicated his success, and a certain indolence which he had would have seemed to forbid it; but the power was within him, and was of that genuine quality which will declare itself; and a man who has it becomes great without intending to be so, and almost without believing that he is remarkable beyond others. The true antique spirit seems to have been revived in him. His characteristics as a sculptor are severe simplicity, perfect beauty in form, distinctness, and repose. Thiele says of him: "He has challenged and has received the decision of the world's Supreme Court, that his name shall stand on the rolls of immortality. And if his life might be embodied in a single emblem, perhaps it should be that of a young lion, with an eye that glows and flashes fire, while he is bound with ivy and led by the hand of the three graces."

The sculpture of Germany in the last part of the eighteenth and the early years of the present century was very interesting. The architect Schinkel was a great lover of antique art, and he had much influence over all arts, as well as in his special department. Thorwaldsen himself so admired the sculptor JOHN RUDOLPH SCHADOW (1786-1822) that when the King of Prussia gave him a commission for a statue he replied: "Sire, there is at this moment in Rome one of your faithful subjects who is more capable than I of performing to your satisfaction the task with which you deign to honor me; permit me to solicit for him your royal favor." The commission was given to Schadow, and he made his charming work, The Spinner. John Rudolph was the son of JOHN GOTTFRIED SCHADOW (1764-1850), who was court sculptor, and long survived his gifted son. The chief works of the father were the statues of Count von der Mark, at Berlin; that of Frederick the Great, at Stettin; Luther's monument in the market-place at Wittenberg, and Bluecher's statue at Rostock.

John Rudolph Schadow studied under both Canova and Thorwaldsen, and was a very gifted artist. He was engaged upon a group of Achilles protecting the body of Penthesilea at the time of his death; it was finished by Wolff.

CHRISTIAN FREDERIC TIECK (1776-1851) was an eminent sculptor of his time, and decorated with sculpture some of the fine edifices erected at Berlin by Schinkel. He was very active in establishing a gallery of models from the antique at Berlin, and was a Director of the Sculptures in the Museum as well as a member of the Academy. His most successful original works were portrait busts, and he had many notable people among his sitters. Among them were the Emperor of Germany, the King of Bavaria, Schelling, Goethe, Lessing, and many others.



CHRISTIAN RAUCH (1777-1857). This eminent sculptor was born at Waldeck, and followed the manner of Schadow, which he carried to its perfection. His statue of Queen Louise (Fig. 121) is one of the finest works of modern sculpture, and his statues of the Generals Scharnhorst and Buelow, in Berlin, are very fine; the reliefs upon the pedestals are of classic beauty. But his masterpiece is the grand Friedrichs monument. Rauch executed many excellent busts; he made good portraits, and yet he elevated the character of his subjects to the greatest nobleness of which they were capable. As a rule Rauch avoided religious subjects, but late in life he modelled the group of Moses supported in prayer by Aaron and Hur.

Among his important works are the statue of Bluecher, at Breslau; that of August Hermann Franke, at Halle; Duerer, at Nuremberg; monument to Maximilian I., at Munich; and six marble Victories for the Walhalla. His works are numerous, and in them we feel that this artist had not a great imaginative power; he rarely conceived imaginary subjects, but he took some fact or personality as his motive, and elevated it to the highest point to which it could be brought, and under his masterly style of execution produced splendid results.

ERNST RIETSCHEL (1804-1860) was a gifted pupil of Rauch. After spending some time in Rome he settled in Dresden, and executed the statue of Friederich August of Saxony, for the Zwingerhof, when but twenty-seven years old. His chief excellence was in portrait statues, and those of Lessing and Luther are remarkable for their powerful expression of the intellectual and moral force of those men. His religious subjects were full of deep feeling, and his lighter works have a charming grace about them.

LUDWIG SCHWANTHALER (1802-1848) studied much in Rome, and was as devoted to the antique as was Thorwaldsen. He executed many works in Munich, the principal ones being the interior decoration of the Glyptothek; also that of the Koenigsbau and two groups for the Walhalla. A prominent work by this master is the bronze statue of Bavaria, which is fifty-four feet high and stands in front of the Ruhmeshalle. He also made twelve gilt-bronze statues of Bavarian sovereigns. Schwanthaler had remarkable powers of invention and a fruitful imagination; in these points he ranks with the first of modern sculptors; but his works rarely rise above what we call decorative art, and in spite of his excellent gifts he lacked the power to arouse any enthusiasm for his statues.

There are many other names that might be mentioned in connection with modern sculpture in Germany. Nowhere have the monuments and portrait statues and busts reached a higher excellence than in what we may call, in general terms, the Berlin school. Profound attention has been given to the proper reproduction of the individual characters of its subjects, while the art has not been allowed to sink into caricature or commonplaceness. Nowhere does the traveller better appreciate the art of our own day than in the sculpture of Germany.

But there are exceptions to this rule; some such artists as THEODORE KALIDE and LUDWIG WICHMANN are wanting in the serious qualities of Schadow, Rauch, and their followers, and sometimes fall into a coarse realism; but in spite of this, the revival of love for the antique, which began with Canova and his time, has borne rich fruit in the works of modern German sculptors.

In France the spirit of modern sculpture has been largely that of the severe classic style, and it has shown many of the same qualities that we have seen in modern German sculpture; but the different characteristics of the two nations have had their influence here as in everything else. In France the artist has aimed at a fine effect—flowing outline and dazzling representations of dramatic motives—far more than the northern sculptors have done. There is less thought and depth of feeling, more outward attraction and striking effect. The classic taste which asserted itself in the time of Canova was adopted in France, but in a French manner; and one of the earliest artists who showed its effects was FRANCOIS JOSEPH BOSIO (1769-1845), who was much honored. He was made a member of the Institute of France and of the Royal Academy of Berlin: he was chief sculptor to the King of France, and executed many public works. He made many portrait busts of the royal family and other prominent persons, but his chief works were the reliefs on the column of the Place Vendome, the Chariot on the arch of the Place du Carrousel, the monument to the Countess Demidoff, and statues of mythological heroes and heroines. For the Chapelle Expiatoire, Bosio executed a group representing Louis XVII. receiving comfort from an angel; the design is not as good as in some of his classic works, but the conception is pure and noble.



JAMES PRADIER (1790-1832), though born in Geneva, was essentially a French sculptor, and excelled the artists of his day in his representations of feminine beauty. His masterpiece is a fountain at Nimes, in which the figures are fine and the drapery noble and distinct in treatment. The serious and comic Muses of the Fountain Moliere are excellent works. He made several separate statues which are well known; his Psyche has a butterfly poised on the upper part of the arm; Atalanta is fastening her sandals; Sappho is in despair. His Niobe group showed his power to represent bold action, and his Prometheus chained, erected in the garden of the Tuileries, is grand and spirited.

We could name a great number of French sculptors belonging to this period whose works are seen in many public places which they adorn, but whose genius was not sufficient to place them in the first ranks of the world's artists, or make the accounts of them anything more than a list of works which has little meaning, except when one stands before them. Perhaps no one man had so wide an influence upon this art as had PIERRE JEAN DAVID (1793-1856), who is called David of Angers, which was his birthplace, in order to distinguish him from Jacques Louis David, the great painter, who was like a father to this sculptor, though in no way connected with him by ties of kindred, as far as we know. But when the sculptor went to Paris, a very poor boy, David the painter, whose attention was called to him in some way, was his friend, and gave him lessons in drawing and aided him in other ways. In 1811 David of Angers obtained the prize which enabled him to go to Rome, and after his return to Paris he was constantly employed. The amount of his work was enormous; many of his statues were colossal, and he executed a great number of busts and more than ninety medallions.

He made the statue of Mme. de Stael; one of Talma for the Theatre Francais; the colossal statue of King Rene at Aix; monument to Fenelon at Cambray; the statue of the great Conde at Versailles; the Gutenberg memorial at Strasburg, which is one of his most successful works, and a large number of other sculptures.

His chief characteristic is realism, and he carried this so far that it frequently became coarseness. David designed the relief for the pediment of the Pantheon. The inscription on the building declares that it is dedicated by a grateful country to its great men, and the sculptor seems to have had this in mind, for he represented in his group a figure of France surrounded by those who had been great in its times of war and days of peace. It is too realistic to be pleasing, and is far less creditable to the sculptor than are many of his less prominent works.

If little can be said of the modern French sculpture prior to our immediate time, there is still less to be told of that of England. There are many public monuments there, but they do not show forth any high artistic genius or rise above the commonplace except in very rare instances. There is but one English sculptor of whom I shall speak. JOHN GIBSON (1791-1866) was born near Conway, in Wales. When he was nine years old his parents went to Liverpool with the intention of sailing for America; but they gave up the idea, and the boy was sent to school in Liverpool. Before this he had been in the habit of drawing and of making sketches of anything that he saw and was pleased with; he now studied the prints in the shop windows, and made pictures, which he sold to his fellow-pupils. He attracted the attention of a print-seller, who was so interested in him that he allowed him to draw from studies and casts from the antique which he had. When fourteen years old the boy was apprenticed to a cabinet-maker, but after a year he persuaded his employer to allow him to leave his shop, and was then apprenticed to a wood-carver. He did not stop at this, however, for when he became acquainted with the Messrs. Francis, who had a marble-yard, he persuaded his second master to release him, and was apprenticed for the third time, and in this case to the occupation which he had determined should be that of his life.

He was now very happy, and his improvement in drawing, modelling, and working in marble was very rapid. After a few months he made the acquaintance of William Roscoe, who became his friend and patron. He remained in Liverpool until he was twenty-seven years old; he had improved every advantage within his reach, but he was very desirous of travelling. In 1817, armed with a few letters of introduction, he went to London, where he obtained several orders, and in October of that year went to Rome.

He had a letter to Canova, who took him under his care and gave him admission to the classes in the Academy, in which he could draw from living models. In 1819 he received his first important commission; it was from the Duke of Devonshire for a group of Mars and Cupid. From this time he advanced steadily in his profession, and was always busy. He lived twenty-seven years in Rome, and passed his summers in Innsbrueck.

In 1844 he went to Liverpool to oversee the erection of his statue of Mr. Huskisson; he was received with enthusiasm, and when he went to Glasgow to superintend the placing of his statue of Mr. Finlay in the Merchants' Hall his reception was even more flattering, as it was given him simply as an artist, and not connected with any former associations, as in Liverpool. During this visit to England Gibson was summoned to Windsor to make a statue of Queen Victoria, which he completed after his return to Rome. The queen was represented in a classical costume, and the diadem, sandals, and borders of the drapery were colored. This was very much criticised and much was written and said about it; Gibson took little notice of all this, and simply answered it by saying, "Whatever the Greeks did was right."

In 1851 Gibson sustained a great loss in the death of his brother Ben, who had lived with him in Rome for fourteen years. Five years later, when in perfect health, the sculptor was attacked by paralysis, and lived but a short time. He was buried in the English cemetery at Rome, and Lord Lytton wrote the inscription upon his monument. It says: "His native genius strengthened by careful study, he infused the spirit of Grecian art into masterpieces all his own. His character as a man was in unison with his attributes as an artist—beautiful in its simplicity and truthfulness, noble in its dignity and elevation." A monument was also raised to Gibson in the church at Conway.

The master left the models of all his works and the larger part of his fortune to the Royal Academy in London. Among his works are Mars and Cupid, at Chatsworth; Psyche borne by Zephyrs, in the Palazzo Torlonia, at Rome, and a replica at St. Petersburg; Hylas surprised by Nymphs, in the National Gallery, London; Sleeping Shepherd Boy, in the Lenox collection in New York; Cupid disguised as a Shepherd, which he often repeated; portraits of Queen Victoria, at Buckingham Palace and Osborne; Sir Robert Peel, in Westminster Abbey; George Stephenson, in St. George's Hall, Liverpool; eighteen portrait busts; sixteen bas-reliefs of ideal subjects and sixteen others for monuments to the dead. A large part of these are in the chapel of the Liverpool Cemetery. He modelled a bas-relief of Christ blessing little children.

Gibson found his entire happiness in his art. In his own words, he worked on "happily and with ever new pleasure, avoiding evil and with a calm soul, making images, not for worship, but for the love of the beautiful. The beautiful elevates us above the crowd in this world; the ideal, higher—yes, higher still, to celestial beauty, the fountain of all. Socrates said that outward beauty was the sign of the inward; in the life of a man, as in an image, every part should be beautiful."

He was never elated by praise; he was glad of tributes which proved that he was respected, but he received all honors with a simplicity of self-respect which spoke the sincere nobility of his nature.

There are many amusing anecdotes told of his absentmindedness about everything not connected with his art. Miss Harriet Hosmer was his only pupil, and she said of him: "He is a god in his studio, but God help him when he is out of it." He never could master the ins and outs of railroad travelling, and even when put in the right train at the right time he would be sure to get out at the wrong place at the wrong time.

On one of his journeys, when he supposed he was at the right place, he got out and asked the porter to show him the way to the cathedral. In his own account he said: "But the scoundrel would have it there was no cathedral in the place, and at last had the impudence to ask me if I knew where I was. Then I discovered that instead of being in Chichester, where I had a particular appointment with the dean and chapter, I was safe in Portsmouth, where there was no cathedral at all."

The time has not come for any comprehensive estimate of the sculpture of our own country. So many of our artists are still living that it would be unjust to speak of them in connection with those whose work is complete and whose rank is fixed as a matter of history. We have no right to say of one who is still working that he has reached his full height, and even after death a certain period must elapse before the true merit of an artist can be established and his name written in its just place upon the roll of fame. So, in leaving this subject, we will turn again to the land of which we first spoke in considering modern sculpture. In Italy this art has not risen above the elevation to which Canova and Thorwaldsen brought it; for though the last was a Dane, his work may truly be said to belong to the Roman school. We must regard Italy as the land of art in a peculiar sense, but it is easy to understand that under the political misfortunes which she has suffered an advance in artistic life could not be made. Now, when a new spirit is active there, and a freer thought prevails in other directions, may we not believe that in the arts there will be a revival of the best inspiration that has ever come to that home of grace and beauty?

As we glance over the entire civilized world of to-day we find an immense activity in all matters pertaining to the fine arts. Schools and academies are multiplied everywhere, and the interest in works of art is universal. Many a private gentleman is to-day as liberal a patron of artists as were the princes and nobles of the past. It is as if there were a vast crucible in which artists of all nations are being tested, and from this testing of their metal it would seem that much pure gold must come forth.

As we review the history of sculpture from its earliest days to the present, we are compelled to linger lovingly with the Greek or classic art. The period in which it existed was a blessed period for the sculptor. We all know that the best foundation for the excellence of art is the study and reproduction of nature, and in the times of the Greeks there was no reason why the human form, the most beautiful object in nature, should not be used by the sculptor for the decoration of the temple, for the statues of the public square or theatre, or for any position in which sculpture could be used at all. The customs of modern life are opposed to this free exhibition of nude forms, and the difficulties that are thrown in the way of the sculptor by this one fact are almost more than we can realize; and the task of draping a figure and yet showing its shape and indicating its proper proportions and action is one before which even a Greek sculptor would have reason to doubt himself.

On the other hand, when a sculptor does succeed in producing a draped figure which satisfies artistic taste, he has achieved much, and merits the highest praise. A drapery which has gracefully composed masses and flowing lines adds great dignity to the figure of a patriarch or a prophet, and there are numerous subjects, religious and monumental, in which a full, graceful drapery is requisite; but when, as is often the case, the sculptor is required to reproduce the actual costume of the day, what can we look for? The truth is, it has no grace in itself; what, then, must it be when put into the fixedness of bronze or marble? Yet where is the remedy for this? We do not wish to see the men whom we have known and who have moved among us in the dress of other men put into an antique disguise by the sculptor; the incongruity of this is too apparent. Much has been written and said upon these points, and no solution of the difficulty has been found; but it is only just that when we judge of the statues made under such difficulties, we should remember them and give the artist the benefit of the consideration of all the hindrances that exist for him.

Westmacott, in his "Handbook of Sculpture," gives as his "Conclusion" an account of the mechanical methods of the sculptor, and I believe that I can add nothing here which will be of greater use to my readers than a quotation from that author.

"The artist, having invented or conceived his subject, usually begins by making a small sketch of it in some soft and obedient substance, as clay or wax. He can change or alter this at his pleasure till he is satisfied with the lines and masses of the composition, and the proportions it will command of light and shadow. He then proceeds to copy this small but useful sketch, as his guide, in its general arrangement, for his full-sized model. Before commencing the larger model it is necessary to form a sort of skeleton or framework of iron and wood, with joints made of wire, to support the great mass of clay in which the figure or group is now to be executed. This iron frame is firmly fixed upon a turning bench, or banker, so that the model may be constantly moved without difficulty, so as to be seen in different lights and in various points of view. As the clay is likely to shrink as it gets dry, it is necessary occasionally to wet it. This is done by sprinkling water over it with a brush, or from a large syringe, and by laying damp cloths upon it. This is the ordinary process for making a model in the 'round.'

"In modelling in rilievo of either kind, alto or basso, a plane or ground is prepared upon which the design is, or should be, carefully drawn. This may be made of clay floated or laid upon a board, or the ground may be of slate, or even of wood, though the latter is objectionable, in large works especially, from its liability to shrink and to be warped by the action of damp or moisture. The clay is then laid in small quantities upon this ground, the outline being bounded by the drawing, which should be carefully preserved; and the bulk or projection of the figures is regulated by the degree of relief the sculptor desires to give to his design.

"If the final work is to be baked in clay (terra-cotta) there must be no iron or wooden nucleus, as it would interfere with the model drying regularly and uniformly, and probably cause it to crack in shrinking. The model is therefore prepared for drying without such support. When perfectly free from moisture the model is placed in an oven and baked slowly, by which it acquires great hardness and the peculiar brownish-red color seen in these works. This art has been brought to great perfection in England in modern days.

"If the final work is to be in marble, or bronze, or only in plaster, the next process after finishing the model is to mould it, in preparation for its being reproduced in a material that will bear moving about without risk of injury to the design. This is done by covering it with a mixture of plaster of Paris with water, which quickly sets or becomes consistent, forming a hard and thick coating over the whole. The clay is then carefully picked out, and an exact matrix, or form, remains. This is washed clean, and the interior is then brushed over with any greasy substance, usually a composition of soap and oil, to prevent the plaster with which it is next to be filled adhering too firmly to it. The fresh plaster is mixed to about the consistency of cream and then poured into the mould, which is gently moved about till the inner surface is entirely filled or covered, so that all parts may be reached. The thickness or substance of the coating depends upon the size of the work and the degree of strength required.

"When the newly introduced plaster is set the mould is carefully knocked away with chisels, and a true cast appears beneath, giving an entire fac-simile of the original model. Some skill is required in making moulds, in order to provide for projecting parts and under-cuttings; practice alone can teach the artist how to deal with those difficulties when they occur. The above general instructions sufficiently explain the ordinary processes of moulding and casting in plaster.

"In metal-casting or founding great attention must be paid to the strengthening of the parts to bear the weight of the metal; but the principle described in plaster-moulding applies also to the preparation for metal-casting. The mixture of metals to form bronze, the proper heating of the furnace, burning and uniting parts, chasing and other processes of founding cannot be fully described in this place. They belong to a distinct practice, and to be well understood must be studied in the foundry.

"If the model—now reproduced in plaster—is to be copied in marble or stone, the first step is to procure a block of the required size. Two stones, called scale-stones, are then prepared, upon one of which the model or plaster cast is placed, and upon the other the rough block of marble. The fronts of these stones have figured marks or 'scales,' to use the technical term, exactly corresponding. An instrument capable of being easily moved, and which is fitted up with socket-joints and movable arms, is then applied to the scale-stone of the model, and a projecting point or 'needle' is made to touch a particular part of the model itself. This is carefully removed to the scale-stone of the rough block, and the marble is cut away till the 'needle' reaches so far into the block as to correspond with the 'point' taken on the model. A pencil-mark is then made to show that the point is found and registered. This process is repeated all over the model and block, alternately, till a rough copy or shape of the model is entirely made. These 'pointing' machines are not always precisely alike in their forms, but the principle upon which they act is exactly similar in all. The statue being thus rudely shaped out, the block is placed in the hands of a superior workman, called a 'carver,' who, having the plastic model near at hand to refer to, copies the more minute portions of the work by means of chisels, rasps, and files, the pencil-marks made by the 'pointer' showing him the precise situation of the parts and the limit beyond which he is not to penetrate into the marble. When the carver has carried the work as far as the sculptor desires, he proceeds himself to give it the finishing touches, improving the details of form and expression, managing the different effects produced by two different materials—one, the plastic model, being opaque; the other, the marble, being considerably diaphanous; giving the proper varieties of texture in the flesh, hair, and drapery, and, more especially, harmonizing the whole.

"The rich quality of surface that appears more or less in works of marble is produced by rubbing with fine sand or pumice-stone and other substances, and the ancients appear to have completed this part of their work by a process which is called 'circumlitio,' and may mean not only rubbing or polishing, but applying some composition, such as hot wax, to give a soft, glowing color to the surface. Many of the ancient statues certainly exhibit the appearance of some foreign substance having slightly penetrated the surface of the work to about one eighth of an inch, and its color is of a warmer tint than the marble below it; a process, be it observed, quite distinct from and not to be confounded with polychromy, or what is usually understood by painting sculpture with various tints, in imitation of the natural color of the complexion, hair, and eyes. Its object, probably, with the ancients as with modern sculptors, has been simply to get rid of the glare and freshness of appearance that is sometimes objected to in a recently finished work, by giving a general warmth to the color of the marble."



INDEX.

"Abduction of Briseis" (Thorwaldsen), 257

Abildgaard, 254

"Abraham and Isaac," 139

"Abundance" (della Porta), 212

Academy of Fine Arts, Florence, Michael Angelo's David in, 201

Achilles, story of, 26; and Priam (Thorwaldsen), 299; and Penthesilea (Schadow), 270

Acropolis, 78

Action in Egyptian sculpture, 3

"Actaeon and his Dogs," 24

"Adam" (Cano), 220

"Adam and Eve," reliefs of, 138, 139; by Rizzo, 154

"Adonis" (Thorwaldsen), 258

"Adoring Madonna," 152

AEgina, marbles of, and Thorwaldsen, 260

AEmilius Paulus, 84

"AEneas and Anchises" (Chaudet), 248

AEsculapius. See Asclepius

AEtolians, 84

Agamemnon, 90

Agesander and the Laocoon, 74

Agnello, Fra Guglielmo d', 130

Agoracritus, 49, 51

Agrippa and the Apoxyomenos, 70

Agrippina, statue of, 103

Aix, 275

Alaric and Minerva Promachos, 35

Albert, Archduke, and Duquesnoy, 226

Alcamenes, 49

Aldovrandi, Gian Francesco, 198

Alexander the Great; statues of, 69, 72; decline after, 72; portrait statues of, 100; and Diogenes, by Puget, 229; by Dannecker, 248; by Thorwaldsen, 259; Entrance into Babylon of, 268

Alexander, Emperor of Russia, and Thorwaldsen, 262

Alexander VII., monument of, 226

Alexandros, sculptor of Venus of Milo, 87

Alto-rilievo, 281

Altoviti, statue of (Cellini), 191

Amadeo, Giovanni Antonio, 157

Amboise Monument, 177

Ambraser Gallery, Vienna, Cellini's salt-cellar in, 190

Amiens Cathedral, 176

Ancient Italian sculpture, 82

Ancona, 156

Andersen, Hans, and Thorwaldsen, 266

Androsphinx, 6

"Angel of Baptism" (Thorwaldsen), 262

"Angel's Salutation" (Stoss), 165

Anguier, Francois, 228

Anguier, Michael, 228

Animals in Egyptian sculpture, 5

Anne of Austria, and Anguier, 228

Anne of Brittany, monument of, 177

"Annunciation" (Donatello), 142

Annunziata, church of, 212

Antigonus, father of Poliorcetes, 73

Antium, 91

Antonelli, Cardinal, 100

Antwerp, town hall of, 231

Aphrodite. See Venus

Apollo; Sosianus, temple of, 61; by Leochares, 65; the Belvedere, 91, theories concerning, 92, 95; the Steinhaeuser, 91; the Stroganoff, 92; by Sansovino, 186; and Daphne, by Bernini, 224; and Daphne, by Canova, 239; by Canova, 240; by Flaxman, 251

Apollodorus, 86

Apollonius, of the Toro Farnese, 76

Apostles (Thorwaldsen), 262

"Apoxyomenos" (Lysippus), 70

Archaic period, 22

Archaistic period, 27

Arches in Rome, 97

Architecture, close connection with Egyptian sculpture, 10

"Archangel Michael and Satan" (Flaxman), 251

Areobrudus, diptych of, 109

Arezzo, 132

Argos, school of, 72

"Ariadne" (Dannecker), 248

Arrezzo, Niccolo of, 135

Artemis, archaistic statue of, 28, 94, 95 (and see Diana)

Aschaffenburg Vischer's works in, 175

Asclepius, by Alcamenes, 50; by Canova, 239

Assos, reliefs from, 23

Assyria, 10

Assyrian influence on Etruscan art, 82

Atalanta, by Pradier, 274

Athena; Promachos (Phidias), 34; birth of, 38; attributes of, 39; representations of, 40; by Phidias, 84; of the Capitol, 94, 95, 96 (and see Minerva and Pallas)

Athenodorus and the Laocoon, 74

Athens, statue from, at Rome, 84

Attalus I., statues of, 78

Augsburg, 123, 164

Augustio, 108

Augustus, Emperor; and archaistic period, 27; and Grecian spoils, 84; statue of, 102

Babylonians, 17

Bacchus; and the Tyrrhenian robbers, 67; tripod of, by Lysicrates, 67; 84; by Sansovino, 185; by Michael Angelo, 200

Baldachin, 174

Balier, Heinrich den, 123

Bamberg, 123; carvings in, 167; and Krafft, 168

Bandinelli, Baccio, 212; and Cellini, 190

Baptistery of Pisa, 128

Baptistery of Florence, 137, 138; gates of, 133

Barberini, Cardinal, and Bernini, 223

"Barberini Faun," 73

Bargello, museum of the, 139

Baryatinska, Princess, 260

Basle, Steinhaeuser Apollo in, 91

Basilica of San Petronio, Bologna, 137

Bas-relief; Egyptian, 2; Assyrian, 12; the first, 20

Basso-rilievo, 281

"Battle of Athenians and Amazons," 78

"Battle of Marathon," 78

"Battle of the Gods and Giants," 78

Bavaria; King of, 270; statue of, 271; sovereigns of, Schwanthaler's statues of, 272

Beata Villana, 151

Beauharnais, monument to, 263

"Beautiful Fountain," Nuremberg, 123

Beauty, Greek love of, 18

Begarelli, Antonio, 193

"Berengaria," statue of, 119

Berlin Museum, works of Pythagoras in, 30; Begarelli's works in, 194

Berlin school, 272

Bernardi, Giuseppe, 237

Berne, cathedral of, 170

Bernini, 223

Berruguete, Alonso, 217

Bertoldo and Michael Angelo, 195

Bethmann, Herr, 248

Beuch, 213

Bienaime, pupil of Thorwaldsen, 261

Bindesboell, architect, 268

"Birth of St. John" (Duerer), 166

Bluecher, Schadow's statue of, 269; Rauch's statue of, 271

Boboli Gardens, 214

Boethus of Chalcedon, 80

Boileau, bust of, 229

Bologna; 128; works of Lombardo in, 192; Michael Angelo in, 198

Bologna, Giovanni da, 213

Bon family, 135

Bontemps, Pierre, 178

Bosio, Francois Joseph, 273

Bottigari, de', 193

Bourges, Cathedral of, 114, 178

Bourgtherroulde, Hotel, 178

"Boy and Dolphin" (Verocchio), 149

"Boy and Goose," 80

Braccini, Nicolo, 187

Bramante and Michael Angelo, 202

Braye, Cardinal de, monument of, 133

Bregno, Antonio Giovanni, 154

Breslau, 271

Briseis, by Thorwaldsen, 257

Bristol, Lord, and Flaxman, 251

British Museum; Harpy monument in, 24; Elgin marbles in, 37; statue of Pericles in, 52; statue of Mausolus in, 57; Etruscan table-ware in, 83; Duerer's carvings in, 166

Bronzes, Etruscan, 82

"Brother and Sister," Niobe group, 64

Bruges, 178

Brugsch-Bey concerning Martisen, 1

Brun, Charles le, monument of, 229

Brun, Ida, Thorwaldsen's statue of, 258

Brunelleschi, 139, 140

Bruni, Lionardo, statue of, 151

Brunswick Museum, 166

Buckingham Palace, and Flaxman, 251; and Gibson, 277

Buonarroti, 194

Buoni, 135

Burgkapelle, and Veit Stoss, 165

Burgos, Altars of, 179

"Burial of Christ" (Krafft), 168

Burns, Flaxman's statue of, 251

Buelow, Rauch's statue of, 270

Byzantium, early Christian sculpture in, 108; ivory carving in, 108

"Cain and Abel," 139

Calabria, Duke of, 153

Calamis, 31

Caligula, and the Thespian Cupid, 61; and Grecian spoils, 84

Callimachus, 52

Callon of AEgina, 27

Cambio, Arnolfo di, 133

Cambray, 275

Campanile at Florence, 146

Campo Santo of Pisa, 131

Cano, Alonso, 219

Canon of Polycleitus, 54

Canova, Antonio, 236; and Gibson, 276

Canova, Pasino, 236

Canterbury Cathedral, 121

Capitol at Rome; Helios in, 69; Minerva in, 95

Capitoline Museum, busts by Canova in, 246

Capuchins and Thorwaldsen, 263

Caracalla, Baths of; and "Farnese Bull," 76; and "Farnesian Hercules," 88

Caridad of Seville, 220

Carlovingians, statues of, 119

Carrousel, Place du, Chariot of, 273

Carthusian Chapel, Dijon, 125

Carver, 283

Casa Santa, Loreto, 184

Castellani collection, 78

Cavaliere Alberto, 258

Cellini, Benvenuto, 187

"Centaurs and Lapithae" (Alcamenes), 51

"Cephalus and Aurora" (Flaxman), 251

Cephisodotus, 55

Ceres; Roman temple of, 83; Livia as, 104

Certosa of Pavia, 177; 194; and Omodeo, 158

Cesena, 156; and Lombardo, 192

Chapelle Expiatoire, 274

Chares of Lindos, 71

"Charity" (Coysevox), 229

Charles I. and Bernini, 226

Charles VIII., 177

Charmidas, 32

Chartres, cathedral of, 114

Chaudet, Antoine Denis, 247

Choragic monument of Lysicrates, 65

Choragus, 65

Christ; early statues of, 106; figure of, at Rheims, 117; by Vischer, 174; by Michael Angelo, 206; by Coustou, 230; by Dannecker, 248; various statues of, by Thorwaldsen, 262; by Gibson, 277

Christian IV., Thorwaldsen's statue of, 266

Christian VIII. and Thorwaldsen, 266

Christian Art, 104

"Christian Charity" (Thorwaldsen), 262

Christian Frederick, Prince, 259

Christian sculpture, 105

Christiansborg palace and Thorwaldsen, 258

Chryselephantine statues, 22

Chur, cathedral of, 164

Church of Our Lady, Thorwaldsen's works in, 262

Cimon, patron of Phidias, 34

Cincinnatus, by Chaudet, 248

Cione, Andrea Arcagnuolo di, 134

Circumlitio, 284

Civitali, Matteo, 153

Claudius; and the Thespian Cupid, 61; arch of, in Rome, 98

Clement VII. and Cellini, 187

Clement XIII., Canova's monument of, 242

Clement XIV., monument of, 240

Cleomenes, 86, 90

Cnidos, Venus of, 60

Coins, Athenian, 35; of Elis, 35

Colbert, tomb of, 229

Colleoni; statue of, 149; and Leopardo, 155

Colleoni Chapel, Bergamo, 157

Cologne, 123

Colonna, Vittoria, and Michael Angelo, 209

Color; in Assyrian bas-reliefs, 14; in AEginetan statues, 26; in thirteenth century sculptures, 115

Colossi, Egyptian, 8; of Thebes, 8

Colossus of Rhodes, 71

"Comedy" (Flaxman), 251

Como, cathedral of, 159

"Conception" (Montanes), 219

Conde, statues of, by Coysevox, 229; by David, 275

Consalvi, Cardinal, 263

Constance, cathedral of, 163

Constantine, arch of, 105; column of, 108; Bernini's statue of, 226

Conway, 277

Copernicus, Thorwaldsen's monument to, 262

Corinthian capital, 53

Cornacini, 74

Corneto, 83

Correggio and Begarelli, 193

Cortona, 132

Cosmo I., and Donatello, 144; Giovanni da Bologna's statue of, 214

Cosmo III. and "Venus de' Medici," 85

Coustou, Guillaume, 230

Coustou, Nicolas, 229

Covent Garden Theatre, 251

Cow, Myron's statue of, 30

Coysevox, Antoine, 229

Cracow and Veit Stoss, 164

Cresilas, 52

"Crowning of the Virgin" (Stoss), 165

Cupid; by Praxiteles, 60; by Michael Angelo, 198; by Dannecker, 248; and Psyche (Thorwaldsen), 257; as a shepherd (Gibson), 183 (and see Eros)

Cybele, by Cellini, 190

Dacians on Trajan's Pillar, 99

Daedalus, 20; and Icarus (Canova), 239

Damophilus, 83

Dannecker, Johann Heinrich, 248

Da Siena, Ugolino, 134

David, by Donatello, 142; by Verocchio, 149; by Michael Angelo, 200

"David and Goliath," 139

David of Angers, 274

David, Jacques Louis, 274

David, Pierre Jean, 274

"Day" (Michael Angelo), 206

"Death," by Bernini, 226; by Pigalle, 230

"Death of the Virgin" (Strasburg), 120

Delphi, bronzes from, 84

Demetrius Poliorcetes, 71

Demidoff, Countess, Bosio's statue of, 274

Denman, Ann, 251

"Deposition from the Cross," by Pisano, 127; by Omodeo, 158

"Descent from the Cross" (Begarelli), 194

"Destruction of the Gauls in Mysia," 78

Devonshire, Duke of, 276

Diadochi, 73

Diana; temple of, at Ephesus, 57; a la Biche, 95 (and see Artemis)

Dibutades, 20

Dijon, 125

Diomed, by Myron, 31

Diptychs, 109

"Discobolus" of Myron, 30

Donatello, 140

Donato di Betto Bardi, 140

Dortmund, wood-carvings in, 167

"Doryphorus," by Polycleitus, 54

Dubois, Cardinal, Coustou's statue of, 230

Duquesnoy, Francois, 226, 231

Duerer, Albrecht; 166; Rauch's statue of, 271

"Dying Gaul," 79

"Dying Warriors" (Schlueter), 232

Egremont, Earl of, 251

Egyptians; ancient sculpture of, 1; influence of, on Etruscan art, 82

"Eldest Daughter," Niobe group, 64

Elector Frederic III., Schlueter's statue of, 234

Eleventh century, metal work in, 111

Elgin, Lord, 37

Elgin marbles, 35, 40

Emo, Admiral, monument of, 242

Emperor of Austria, Canova's bust of, 243

England; sculpture introduced into, in fourteenth century, 125; in sixteenth century, 179

"Entombment of Christ" (Roldan), 220

Erinnyes, 25

Ernst, Vischer's monument of, 171

Eros, 55; of Centocelle, 60 (and see Cupid)

Escorial, church of, 221

Esquiline, Discobolos found on, 31

Estofado, 220

Etampes, Mme. d', 189

Etruscans originated Italian sculpture, 82

Eurydice, by Canova, 238

Eurythmy, 49

Eustathius of Rome, 108

Eve, by Cano, 220

"Evening" (Michael Angelo), 206

"Expulsion of Heliodorus" (Thorwaldsen), 254

Eyck, van, 178

Fabbriche Nuova, 186

Faliero, Giovanni, 236

Farnese Palace; and Michael Angelo, 209; della Porta's statues in, 212

"Farnesian Bull," 76

"Farnesian Hercules," 88

Farsetti, Commendatore and Canova, 237

Fenelon, David's statue of, 275

Ferdinand and Isabella, monument of, 180

Ferrara, Quercia's works in, 137; Lombardo's works in, 192

Ferrari, Giuseppe, and Canova, 237

Ferrucci, Andrea, 152

Fiammingo, Il, 213

"Fidelity" (Coysevox), 229

Fiesole, Mino da, 152

Fifteenth century, 136

Finlay, Gibson's statue of, 276

Fionia, Island of, 257

Fiorino, 187

"Fischkasten" (Syrlin), 163

Flaccus, Fulvius, and statues from Volsinii, 82

Flaminius, 84

Flaxman, John, 250

Flora, Julia as, 104

Florence; and Giovanni Pisano, 132; and Pietro di Giovanni, 135; Ghiberti's works in, 140

Florence, Baptistery of, 133

Florence, cathedral of, high altar in, 212

Forum Trajani, 98

Fountain; by Labenwolf, 176; by Giovanni da Bologna, 214; by Bernini, 226; of the Manneken-Pis, 227; Moliere, 274

Fourteenth century, 122

Fra Guglielmo d'Agnello, 130

France in fourteenth century, 124

Francis I., 148, 176; and Rustici, 183; and Cellini, 189; monument of, by Pilon, 216

Franke, Rauch's statue of, 271

Frankfort, wood-carvings in, 167

Frari, church of, 154

Frauenkirche, Nuremberg; 123; Krafft's works in, 167

Frederic II., 127

Frederick the Great, Schadow's statue of, 269

Freiburg, cathedral of, 121

French monuments, Museum of, 230

Friedrich August, Rietschel's statue of, 271

Friedrichs monument, 271

Frue Kirche, 268

Fulvius Nobilior, 84

Furstenburg, Cardinal, and Coysevox, 229

"Fury of Athamas" (Flaxman), 251

"Gallic theory" concerning Apollo, Diana, and Minerva, 96

"Gallic Warrior" in Venice, 78

Gambarelli, The, 151

Ganymede, by Leochares, 65; by Thorwaldsen, 260

Gattamelata, statue of, 145

Genii, by Thorwaldsen, 268

Genoa, 153

Genre; Apoxyomenos as example of, 70; sculpture, 81

Germany, Emperor of, 270

Ghibelline Street, 211

Ghiberti, Lorenzo, 133, 138

Ghirlandajo, Domenico, and Michael Angelo, 195

Gibson, John, 275

Giovanni, Luca di, 137

Giovanni, Pietro di, 135

Girardon, Francois, 228

Glycon, 88

Glyptothek, Munich; groups from AEgina in, 25; Barberini Faun in, 73; Thorwaldsen's Adonis in, 258; Schwanthaler's decoration of, 271

"Gobbo, Il." See Solari

Goethe, Tieck's statue of, 270

Golden House of Nero, 84; "Venus Callipiga" in, 87

Gorgasus, 83

Gothic style, 114, 115; in German art, 120; hindrances of, 160

Gottfried of Strasburg, 115

Gottskalken, Thorvald, 253

Goujon, Jean, 216

Graces, The, by Pilon, 216; by Canova, 241; by Thorwaldsen, 260

Granacci, Francesco, 194

Granada, cathedral of, Virgin by Cano in, 220

Great Elector, Schlueter's statue of, 233.

Greece; ancient sculpture of, 18; religion of, 19; influence of, on Etruscan art, 82; portrait sculpture in, 100

Gregory XVI., Pope, 100

Grimani, Senator, 239

Grimm; concerning Donatello's St. George, 143; concerning Michael Angelo's David, 200

Groeulund, Karen, 253

Grumbach, statue of (Krafft), 168

Guardian Angel, church of, 180

"Guardian Angel" (Thorwaldsen), 262

Guido Reni, 64

Guillain, Simon, 227

Guillaume de Sens, 121

Guinifort and Omodeo, 158

Gutenberg memorial, Strasburg, 275

Hadrian, Emperor; and archaistic period, 27; and Glycon, 88

Halle; wood-carvings in, 167; statue of Franke in, 271

Hamilton, Gavin, 60

Harald Hildetand, 252

Harcourt, Comte d', Pigalle's statue of, 230

"Harpy Monument," 24

Hartmann of Aue, 115

Hayder, Simon, 163

Hebe, by Thorwaldsen, 258

Heinrich II., Krafft's statue of, 168

Helios, 69

Henry II., monument of, 216

Henry III. of England, 121

Henry VII., monument of, 179

Hephaestus (Vulcan) by Alcamenes, 49

Hera; statue of, by Polycleitus, 53; temple of, at Argos, 53 (and see Juno)

Heracles (Hercules); and Triton, 23; and Cecrops, 23 (and see Hercules)

Hercules; by Scopas, 59; by Lysippus, 69; caricature of, 80; the Farnesian, 88; by Vischer, 174; by Michael Angelo, 196; and Nessus, by Giovanni da Bologna, 214; by Pigalle, 230; and Lichas, by Canova, 247 (and see Heracles)

Hermes, by Thorwaldsen, 258

Hernandez, Gregorio, 218, 220

Hesperides, apples of, 89

Hieracosphinx, 6

Hildesheim, bronze gate at, 112

History shown by Assyrian bas-reliefs, 16

Honor and Valor, temple of, 83

Hope, Thomas, 251, 256

"Hope," Thorwaldsen's statue of, 260

Hosmer, Harriet, 278

Hoeyer, 253

Humboldt, Baron von, 257, 258

Huskisson, Gibson's statue of, 276

"Hylas and Nymphs" (Gibson), 277

Iliad, selection from, 94

Intarsiatore, 152

Iphigenia, relief of, 90

Isabella of Aragon, statue of, 119

Ischia, Marquis of, 244

Isocephalism, 44

Italian classic sculpture, time of, 105

Italy in fourteenth century, 126

Ivory carving; in Byzantium, 108; in Germany, 110; in fourteenth century, 123

"Jacob and Esau," 139

Jacopo della Fonte, 137

Jaen, cathedral of, 220

Janina, 92

Jason, by Thorwaldsen, 255

Johannis Cemetery, 167, 168

"John the Baptist," by Andrea Pisano, 134; by Berruguete, 218

Jordan, Esteban, 218

Joseph; history of, by Ghiberti, 139; and Potiphar's wife, 193

Joseph of Arimathea, by Canova, 243

"Joshua before Jericho," 139

Julia as Flora, 104

Julia and Canova, 246

Julius II., Pope; and the Laocoon, 74; and Sansovino, 184; and Michael Angelo, 202; mausoleum of, 206

"Junction of the Seine and Marne" (Coustou), 230

Juni, Juan de, 218, 220

Juno, 86 (and see Hera)

Jupiter; Otricoli, 36; temple of, at Olympia, 51; "Tonans" on Trajan's Pillar, 99; as St. Peter, 107 (and see Zeus)

Juste, Jean, 177

"Justice," by Krafft, 170; by Vischer, 174; by della Porta, 212

Justinian, monument of, 108

Kalide, Theodore, 272

King of Prussia and Schadow, 269

Koenigsbau, 271

Koenigsberg, statue in, 234

Kora, 20

Krafft, Adam, 167

"Kreugas and Damoxenes" (Canova), 247

Kriosphinx, 6

Kunigunde, by Krafft, 168

Kuenz, Nicolaus, 170

Labenwolf, Pankraz, 175

Lamberger, Simon, 171

"Lamentation" (Krafft), 170

Lamp of Minerva, by Callimachus, 53

Laocoon, 74; by Sansovino, 185

"Last Judgment," of Rheims cathedral, 117

Lateran; Myron's Marsyas in, 31; antique statue of Nemesis in, 51; statue of Sophocles in, 100; statue of St. Hippolitus in, 106; Sarcophagi in, 107; Bernini's "Pieta" in, 226

Leah, by Michael Angelo, 206

Le Mans, cathedral of, 114

Lenox Gallery, New York, 277

Leo I., Pope, 107

Leo X., Pope, 148, 184; and Michael Angelo, 204

Leo XII. and Thorwaldsen, 263

Leochares, 65

Leopardo, Alessandro, 149, 155

Lessing, Tieck's statue of, 270; Rietschel's statue of, 271

Leuchtenberg, Duke of, monument to, 263

Liebfrauenkirche, 178

"Lion of Lucerne" (Thorwaldsen), 261

Liverpool Cemetery, chapel, 277

Livia, wife of Augustus, 102, 104

Loggia de' Lanzi, Florence, groups in, 213

Loggietta of the Campanile, Venice, 186

Lombardi, The, 154

Lombardo, Alfonso, 192

"Lord's Supper" (Thorwaldsen), 262

Loreto, 184

Louis of Bavaria and Thorwaldsen, 258, 262, 263

Louis XII., monument of, 177

Louis XIII., Anguier's statue of, 228

Louis XIV.; Guillain's statue of, 227; and Girardon, 228; Coysevox's statue of, 229; Coustou's statue of, 230

Louis XVIII.; and Venus of Milo, 87; Bosio's statue of, 274

Louise, Queen, Rauch's statue of, 270

Louvre, Paris; Egyptian collection in, 1; archaic reliefs in, 23; "Venus of Milo" in, 87; statue of Artemis in, 95; Museum of Modern Sculpture in, 177; monument by Juste in, 178; Cellini's nymph in, 190; Pilon's "Graces" in, 216; bas-reliefs by Goujon in, 216; Sarrazin's works in, 227; Guillain's Louis XIV. in, 227; Girardon's works in, 228; Puget's works in, 229

"Love in Repose" (Thorwaldsen), 254

Luebke, Wilhelm; concerning Apollo Belvedere, 94; concerning fourteenth century, 221; concerning Schlueter, 233

Lucca, 128, 137

Lucian, concerning Calamis, 32

Ludovico Moro and Omodeo, 159

Luther, bust of (Thorwaldsen), 268; Schadow's monument to, 269; Rietschel's statue of, 271

Lysippus, 68; school of, 72; Hercules by, 88; power of, 89

Lytton, Lord, concerning Gibson, 277

Madonna, statue of (Freiburg), 121; repetition of, 122; by Arnolfo di Cambio, 133; by Stoss, 165; by Michael Angelo, 196, 200

Madonna del Soccorso, chapel of, 216

Magnani, Anna Maria, 256

Maidbrunn, Krafft's work in, 170

"Maiden and Bird" (Dannecker), 248

Majano, Benedetto da, 152

Manuel, Nicolaus, 170

Marburg, wood-carvings in, 167

Marcellus, 83

Marcus Aurelius; arch of, in Rome, 98; statue of, 209

Maria Louisa, Canova's statue of, 243

Marienkirche, Count Sparr's monument in, 231

Mark, Count von der, 269

Mars; and the Romans, by Sansovino, 186; by Thorwaldsen, 258; and Cupid, by Gibson, 276, 277

Marsyas, by Myron, 31

Martisen, Egyptian sculptor, 1

Mary of Aragon, 152

Marys, The, by Canova, 243

Massegne, The, 135

Massimi Villa, 30

Matthias Corvinus, 152

Mausoleum, 57

Mausolus, 56

Maximianus, cathedra of, 108

Maximilian I., Rauch's statue of, 271

Mazarin, Cardinal, tomb of, 229

Medemet Haboo, sculpture in, 4

Medes, 17

Medici, Catherine de', 216

Medici, Cosmo de', 144; and Cellini, 190

Medici, Giuliano de', 204

Medici, Lorenzo de', 195, 204

Medici, Piero de', 144; and Michael Angelo, 196

Melos, 50

Mendelsohn and Thorwaldsen, 267

Menides of Antiocheia, 87

Mercury, by Sansovino, 186; by Giovanni da Bologna, 214; by Pigalle, 230; by Thorwaldsen, 260

Merovingians, statues of, 119

Metal work; Assyrian, 14; in tenth century, 110; in eleventh century, 111

Michael Angelo; attempted to restore the Laocoon, 74; concerning Ghiberti's gates, 139; and Cellini, 187, 191, 194

Milan, 156; cathedral of, and Omodeo, 158

Milo (Melos), 87

Milo, by Puget, 229; by Dannecker, 248

Minerva; temple of, in AEgina, 25; of the Capitol, 95; temple of, in the Forum, 98 (and see Athena and Pallas)

Mocenigo, Doge Pietro, 155

Modena, Antonio da, 193

"Moderation" (Vischer), 174

Montanes, Juan Martinez, 218

Monte Oliveto, 152

Montmorenci, Duke de, tomb of, 228

Montorsoli attempted to restore the Laocoon, 74

Monumental sculpture of thirteenth century, 119

Moore, Sir John, Flaxman's statue of, 251

Moritz, statue of (Pigalle), 230

Morley, Mrs., monument of, 251

"Morning" (Michael Angelo), 206

Moses; on Mount Sinai, 139; by Michael Angelo, 206, 207; Aaron, and Hur (Rauch), 271

"Moses Fountain," 125

Mount Cithaeron and "Farnese Bull," 76

Mummius and Grecian spoils, 84

Munich, group by Cephisodotus in, 55

Murillo, 221

"Music" (della Robbia), 146

Mycenae, Lion Gate of, 20

Myron of Eleutherae, 30; followers of, 51

Naples; Laocoon group in, 76; historical statues in, 78

Naples, Museum of; "Venus Callipiga" in, 87; and "Farnese Bull", 76; "Farnesian Hercules" in, 88

Napoleon and Canova, 242, 243

National Gallery, London, 277

"Nativity," by Rossellino, 152; by Anguier, 228

Nemesis of Agoracritus, 51

Neptune; by Sansovino, 186; by Cellini, 190; by Giovanni da Bologna, 214

Nero, and the Thespian Cupid, 61; and Grecian spoils, 84

Niccolo of Arezzo, 135

Nicodemus; by Krafft, 170; by Bandinelli, 212; by Canova, 243

"Night," by Michael Angelo, 206, 208

"Nile of the Vatican," 73

Nimes, Pradier's fountain at, 274

Nimrud, bas-reliefs at, 13

Niobe; of Mount Sipylus, 20; group, 61; myth of, 62

Noah, 139

Noceto, 153

Notre Dame, church of; statue of Louis XIV. in, 229; Coustou's sculptures in, 230; d'Harcourt's monument in, 230

Nuremberg; sculptures of, 123; and Veit Stoss, 164; and Wohlgemuth, 166; statue of Duerer in, 271

"Nymph," by Dannecker, 248; by Bosio, 273

Nysoe and Thorwaldsen, 265

Obelisks, 4

Octavia, portico of, and Venus de' Medici, 85

OEdipus, by Chaudet, 248

Oehlenschlager, 265

Oluf Paa, 252

Olympiad, 41

Olympic games, 41

Omodeo. See Amadeo

Or San Michele, church of, 134, 143, 149

Orcagna, Andrea, 134

"Orpheus and Eurydice" (Canova), 238

Orvieto, 133

Osborne, 277

Othman IV., Caliph, and Colossus of Rhodes, 72

Our Lady, church of, Nuremberg, 123

Padua, 137, 156

"Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture," relief of, by Chaudet, 248

Palais de Justice (Bruges), 178

Palazzo Grassi, 193

Palazzo Pubblico, fountain in front of, 214

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