Online Encyclopedia

NICOLAS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 336 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NICOLAS 

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CousTOU (1658–1733) was the son of a wood-carver at Lyons, where he was born . At eighteen he removed to Paris, to study under C . A .
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Coysevox, his
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mother's
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brother, who presided over the recently-established Academy of
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Painting and Sculpture; and at three-and-twenty he gained the Colbert prize, which entitled him to four yea's'
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education at the French Academy at Rome . He afterwards became rector and chancellor of the Academy of Painting and Sculpture . From the
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year 1700 he was a most active collaborator with Coysevox at the palaces of Marly and
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Versailles . He was remarkable for his facility; and though he was specially influenced by Michelangelo and Algardi, his numerous
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works are among the most typical specimens of his age now extant . The most famous are "La Seine et la
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Marne," "La
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Saone," the "Berger Chasseur" in the gardens of the Tuileries, the bas-
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relief "Le Passage du Rhin" in the Louvre, and the "Descent from the
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Cross" placed behind the choir altar of Notre Dame at Paris . His younger brother, GUILLAUME COUSTOU (1671-1746), was a sculptor of still greater merit . He also gained the Colbert prize; but refusing to submit to the rules of the Academy, hesoon
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left it, and for some time wandered houseless through the streets of Rome . At length he was befriended by the sculptor Legros, under whom he studied for some time . Returning to Paris, he was in 1704 admitted into the Academy of Painting and Sculpture, of which he afterwards became director; and, like his brother, he was employed by Louis XIV .

, His finest works are the famous

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group of the "Horse Tamers," originally at Marly, now in the Champs Elysees at Paris, the
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colossal group "The Ocean and the Mediterranean" at Marly, the
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bronze "Rhone" which formed
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part of the statue of Louis XIV. at Lyons, and the sculptures at the entrance of the Hotel
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des Invalides . Of these latter, the bas-relief representing Louis XIV . -mounted and accompanied by Justice and Prudence was destroyed during the Revolution, but was restored in 1815 by
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Pierre Cartellier from Coustou's model; the bronze figures of Mars and
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Minerva, on either side of the doorway, were not interfered with . Another GUILLAUME Couszou (1716-1777), the son of Nicolas, also studied at Rome, as winner of the Colbert prize . While to a
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great extent a copyist of his predecessors, he was much affected by the
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bad taste of his time, and produced little or nothing of permanent value . See Louis Gougenot, Aloge de M . Coustou le jeune (1903) ; Arsene Houssaye, Histoire de fart francais au X VIII' siecle (186o) ; Lady Dilke,
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Gazette des beaux-arts, vol.
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xxv . (1901) (2 articles) .

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