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See also: born at See also: Versailles on the 18th of See also: March 1740
.
At the age of twelve he entered the Ecole royale de Sculpture, and at twenty, having learnt all that he could from Michel Ange
See also: Slodtz and See also: Pigalle, he carried off the prix de See also: Rome and See also: left See also: France for See also: Italy, where he spent the next ten years of his See also: life
.
His brilliant talent, which seems to have been formed by the influence of that See also: world of statues with which See also: Louis XIV. peopled the gardens of Versailles rather than by the lessons of his masters, delighted
See also: Pope See also: Clement XIV., who, on seeing the St See also: Bruno executed by See also: Houdon for the See also: church of St Maria degli Angeli, said " he would speak, were it not that the rules of his
See also: order impose silence." In Italy Houdon had lived in the presence of that second See also: Renaissance with which the name of Winckelmann is associated, and the See also: direct and See also: simple treatment of the See also: Morpheus which he sent to the See also: Salon of 1771 See also: bore witness to its influence
.
This See also: work procured him his " agregation " to the See also: Academy of See also: Painting and Sculpture, of which he was made a full member in 1775
.
Between these See also: dates Houdon had not been idle; busts of
Catharine II., See also: Diderot and See also: Prince Galitzin were remarked at the Salon of 1773, and at that of 1795 he produced, not only his Morpheus in marble, but busts of Turgot, See also: Gluck (in which the marks of small-pox in the face were reproduced with striking effect) and Sophie See also: Arnould as See also: Iphigeneia (now in the See also: Wallace Collection, See also: London), together with his well-known marble See also: relief, " Grive suspendue See also: par See also: les pattes." He took also an active See also: part in the teaching of the academy, and executed for the instruction of his pupils the celebrated Ecorche still in use
.
To every Salon Houdon was a chief contributor; most of the leading men of the See also: day were his sitters; his busts of d'See also: Alembert, Prince See also: Henry of Prussia, Gerbier, Buffon (for Catharine of
See also: Russia) and Mira-beau are remarkable portraits; and in 1778, when the See also: news of See also: Rousseau's
See also: death reached him, Houdon started at once for Ermenonville, and there took a cast of the dead See also: man's face, from which he produced the See also: grand and life-like See also: head now in the Louvre
.
In 1779 his bust of See also: Moliere, at the Theatre See also: Francais, won universal praise, and the celebrated draped statue of Voltaire, in the See also: vestibule of the same theatre, was exhibited at the Salon of 1781, to which Houdon also sent a statue of Marshal de See also: Tourville, commissioned by the See also: king, and the
See also: Diana executed for Catharine II
.
This work was refused; the See also: jury alleged that a statue of Diana demanded drapery; without drapery, they said, the goddess became a " suivante de See also: Venus," and not even the proud and See also: frank chastity of the attitude and expression could save the Diana of Houdon (a See also: bronze See also: reproduction of which is in the Louvre) from insult
.
Three years later he went to See also: America, there to carry out a statue of See also: Washington
.
With See also: Franklin, whose bust he had recently executed, Houdon left France in 1785, and, staying some See also: time with Washington at See also: Mount See also: Vernon, he modelled the bust, with which he decided to go back to See also: Paris, there to See also: complete the statue destined for the capitol of the See also: State of Virginia
.
After his return to his native country Houdon executed for the king of Prussia, as a companion to a statue of Summer, La Frileuse, a nail embodiment of shivering cold, which is one of his best as well as one of his best-known See also: works
.
The Revolution interrupted the busy flow of commissions, and Houdon took up a See also: half-forgotten project for a statue of St Scholastica
.
He was immediately denounced to the See also: convention, and his life was only saved by his instant and ingenious adaptation of St Scholastica into an embodiment of Philosophy
.
Under See also: Napoleon, of whom in 1806 he made a nude statue now at See also: Dijon, Houdon received little employment; he was, however, commissioned to execute the See also: colossal reliefs intended for the decoration of the See also: column of the " Grand Army " at See also: Boulogne (which ultimately found a different destination); he also produced a statue of See also: Cicero for the senate, and various busts, amongst which may be cited those of Marshal See also: Ney, of Josephine and of Napoleon himself, by whom Houdon was rewarded with the See also: legion of honour
.
He died at Paris on the 16th of See also: July 1828
.
See memoir by Emile Delerot and Arsene Legrelle in Memoires de la societe See also: des sciences morales
.
. de See also: Seine-et-See also: Oise, iv
.
49 et seq
.
(1857); Anatole de Montaiglon and Georges Duplessis in Revue universelle des arts, i. and ii
.
(1855–1856); Hermann Dierks, Houdons Leben and Werke (See also: Gotha, 1887); See also: Albert Terrade, Autour de la statue de See also: Jean Houdon (Versailles, 1892); P
.
E
.
Mangeant, Sur une statuette de Voltaire par J
.
Houdon (Paris, 1896)
.
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